barlew
Godlike
So I have spent the morning doing a load more testing and I have just added to my original benchmarks to reflect the results.
As I said in the review I wanted to try to cool the CPU down, and the only obvious way to do this is to reduce the PL1, PL2 states of the CPU. E.g. reduce the performance of the CPU to keep it cooler. I was not wild about the idea for obvious reasons but it did provide some pretty good results.
I reduced the PL1, PL2 states to 30W and set the TGP and Dynamic Boost values for the GPU to 150W and 15W respectively.
The frame rates for the games remained pretty consistent to the original benchmarks. I think the most FPS lost was 4. However the cooling gains were very significant. I saw average CPU temps drop to between 5-12C so that for most of the games they were averaging in the low to mid 80C's, Even more significantly the peaks which were hitting as high as 97C disappeared. The highest peak I saw was 92C very briefly.
So whilst I would still prefer to be able to under-volt, for gaming this works very well.
It isn't all good news however. I also ran the multi core test in Cinebench to see how CPU heavy workloads would be affected. Suffice to say the performance absolutely plummeted compared to where it was.
Fortunately the CC software allows you to make multiple profiles really easily, so I have kept the standard profile and setup another one just for gaming which I can switch between.
As I said in the review I wanted to try to cool the CPU down, and the only obvious way to do this is to reduce the PL1, PL2 states of the CPU. E.g. reduce the performance of the CPU to keep it cooler. I was not wild about the idea for obvious reasons but it did provide some pretty good results.
I reduced the PL1, PL2 states to 30W and set the TGP and Dynamic Boost values for the GPU to 150W and 15W respectively.
The frame rates for the games remained pretty consistent to the original benchmarks. I think the most FPS lost was 4. However the cooling gains were very significant. I saw average CPU temps drop to between 5-12C so that for most of the games they were averaging in the low to mid 80C's, Even more significantly the peaks which were hitting as high as 97C disappeared. The highest peak I saw was 92C very briefly.
So whilst I would still prefer to be able to under-volt, for gaming this works very well.
It isn't all good news however. I also ran the multi core test in Cinebench to see how CPU heavy workloads would be affected. Suffice to say the performance absolutely plummeted compared to where it was.
Fortunately the CC software allows you to make multiple profiles really easily, so I have kept the standard profile and setup another one just for gaming which I can switch between.