SpyderTracks
We love you Ukraine
There are hundreds of reputable third party benchmark sites and channels....But is the only tool I have to set up comparisons bewteen CPU performance...
There are hundreds of reputable third party benchmark sites and channels....But is the only tool I have to set up comparisons bewteen CPU performance...
Thank you for your explanation. Just out of curiosity, a 330W adaptor would be enough to power a i9-9900K and RTX 2080? If I would be willing to spend the money, which problems would I find with such CPU and GPU?
Based on my extensive testing, the laptops cooling ability throttles at around the same point as the available current starts to throttle. At the point the current starts to throttle you're looking at temps of nearly 100C in the processor.. See my display picture for the official clevo artwork for the octane chassis. This is a laptop that will run hot if you allow it to run freely. In intensive gaming you're actually better downclocking the processor down to about 4.2GHz in order to avoid hitting any kind of throttling and your framerates will actually do better.
I have the i9 and rtx2080 setup, at the point you start being upset about temperatures you are free to turn down your settings or etc to have a more sensible office mode. The laptop has a subwoofer so during gaming sessions when the fan is blowing you won't really notice it.
This laptop is good for tinkering if thats what you like to do. If you still want an i9, rtx 2080 laptop you are free to pay an extra thousand to get an alienware with the same spec and two power bricks but it will still run at 100C under a full load. and the dual bricks aren't rated 330 each on the alienware one but are in the 200ish region i I remember
Will i7-9700K and i7-8700K do better than i9-9900K as for thermal throttling? What about RTX 2070 vs RTX 2080 in the same respect? If you don't mind explain me... why do you need such powerful laptop?
If just for gaming, the octane isn’t necessary, there’s no benefit to having the desktop cpu over an i7 mobile cpu.
If it’s just a gaming rig, then the vortex would be better suited.
It definitely has it's uses, for media creation or editing, big datasets processing, VM's, it's fantastic.the octane is sort of when you want a mix between a laptop and a pc but something not quite as good as either.
Its not a great laptop and its not a great pc.
It's a bit retro in my opinion, I feel like one of those stoic people who first carted around those massive laptops in the 90s that were the size of briefcases.
Obviously if they're on a 4th generation processor or something then it's going to struggle, but this is a current gen mobile processor with a hell of a lot more power.Total War games demands single core power. The reason is that most of them are not suited to use multicore, but just only 1 core effectively. There are complains everywhere, people who have desktops with GPU GTX 1080 can't run Attila Total War decently because they suffer fps drops to 20 or even 15 which makes the game unplayable. If you can show me proof that i7-8750H or i7-9750H (considered the top CPUs among branded laptops) can run Rome 2 or Attila with stable fps, I will think about that. Unfortunately, there is very little evidence of these CPU performance with Total War games.
Basically, any desktop chip in any laptop WILL thermal throttle unless an undervolt is applied, and even then it will power throttle. They will never reach full performance as if they were in a desktop.Thank you for your explanations, they are very useful and now I know that a 9th generation CPU performs better than 4th generation CPU with the same frequency. I ask you patience because I do not have a computing background, just a chemical engineer who likes gaming sometimes. I am also worried about thermal throttling. I have read some people saying that i9 CPUs are facing thermal throttling in laptops (i9-8950HK, i9-9900K) and I wanted to know how true is that based on your opinion and also if i7-8700K or i7-9700K may help to relief thermal throttling considering clevo chasis (octane VI) and its cooling associated.
Thank you for your explanations, they are very useful and now I know that a 9th generation CPU performs better than 4th generation CPU with the same frequency. I ask you patience because I do not have a computing background, just a chemical engineer who likes gaming sometimes. I am also worried about thermal throttling. I have read some people saying that i9 CPUs are facing thermal throttling in laptops (i9-8950HK, i9-9900K) and I wanted to know how true is that based on your opinion and also if i7-8700K or i7-9700K may help to relief thermal throttling considering clevo chasis (octane VI) and its cooling associated.
I would love to see the same sort of analysis done with the 9700k in the Octane. I think it would make a difference and allow it to perform more efficiently than the 9900k for most situations.
Debiruman, can you tell me which temperatures you reach while gaming? Do you have any extra cooling device or system?