Dear Members,
I am having some issues and cannot understand certain things regarding throttlestop. It will be very kind if anyone can advice and help me.
I bought a new laptop ACER swift 3 SF314-55G last week. Since yesterday I am noticing that the laptop is reaching absurd temperatures, just opening programs. I do not play any games on this machine. Opening an app will result temperature hitting around 75 degrees or so. Idles are around 45-55 degrees.
I searched google and found throttlestop. I tired undervolting my CPU. The screenshots are attached. I found mine limit to be at -125mv. Anything above that crashes my CPU. I don’t see any drop in my temperatures. Before the undervolt they were almost the same. To get temperatures undercontrol, I have put a limit on the turbo ratio limits. Please guide if I am doing anything wrong.
Apart from that I also ran a benchmark by limiting all the cores to 39. But in throttlestop each core has a limit I suppose. So, did I damage my cpu by cranking that up by 500Mhz?
Regards,
Gursimran
I am having some issues and cannot understand certain things regarding throttlestop. It will be very kind if anyone can advice and help me.
I bought a new laptop ACER swift 3 SF314-55G last week. Since yesterday I am noticing that the laptop is reaching absurd temperatures, just opening programs. I do not play any games on this machine. Opening an app will result temperature hitting around 75 degrees or so. Idles are around 45-55 degrees.
I searched google and found throttlestop. I tired undervolting my CPU. The screenshots are attached. I found mine limit to be at -125mv. Anything above that crashes my CPU. I don’t see any drop in my temperatures. Before the undervolt they were almost the same. To get temperatures undercontrol, I have put a limit on the turbo ratio limits. Please guide if I am doing anything wrong.
Apart from that I also ran a benchmark by limiting all the cores to 39. But in throttlestop each core has a limit I suppose. So, did I damage my cpu by cranking that up by 500Mhz?
Regards,
Gursimran