Saturday, June 20th 2020
TechPowerUp ThrottleStop 9 Released - Override OEM Power Throttling
TechPowerUp today released ThrottleStop 9 by Kevin Glynn, a groundbreaking update to the popular app that lets you take greater control over the power management in your Intel-powered notebook or desktop system, unleashing more performance by overriding OEM-preset processor throttling. Version 9.0 of ThrottleStop comes with system-level improvements that ensure the app isn't blocked Valorant anti-cheat, or false-positives by similar mechanisms.
The app also adds awareness and optimization for Windows 10 May 2020 Update (version 2004). Support for Intel 10th Gen Intel Core processors has been added, including Limit Reasons access. PROCHOT Offset adjustment feature has been added. The C-states window has been redesigned to make it easier to work with 6-core and 8-core processors. The throttle on the main screen has been improved to now display the type of throttling. Consistency of temperature monitoring between the notification window and main window has been improved. Grab the app from the link below.
DOWNLOAD: TechPowerUp ThrottleStop 9.0The change-log follows.
The app also adds awareness and optimization for Windows 10 May 2020 Update (version 2004). Support for Intel 10th Gen Intel Core processors has been added, including Limit Reasons access. PROCHOT Offset adjustment feature has been added. The C-states window has been redesigned to make it easier to work with 6-core and 8-core processors. The throttle on the main screen has been improved to now display the type of throttling. Consistency of temperature monitoring between the notification window and main window has been improved. Grab the app from the link below.
DOWNLOAD: TechPowerUp ThrottleStop 9.0The change-log follows.
- Replaced the WinRing0 and RwDrv.sys drivers for improved Windows 10 2004 compatibility.
- First version compiled with Visual Studio 2019.
- Added code to stop ThrottleStop from starting if it previously crashed on startup.
- Added options to adjust the main ThrottleStop font.
- Enabled Limit Reasons access for Intel 10th Gen Core i CPUs.
- Added max temperature and max power consumption to the main screen.
- Redesigned the C States window to include 6 and 8 core support.
- New Notification Area power icon.
- Added an adjustable PROCHOT Offset feature.
- Redesigned Throttle indicator on the main screen which includes types of throttling.
- NVIDIA MHz reporting added to the log file and to the GPU button.
- Improved consistency between user interface and Notification Area temperatures.
31 Comments on TechPowerUp ThrottleStop 9 Released - Override OEM Power Throttling
If so, @unclewebb you based god.
version 9? when was this first released?
PROCHOT: this word in latin america spanish, sounds terribly wrong... I would change it to PROC-HOT, or something like that....
As an example, I can't even play Spelunky on my Radeon VII. The card sets an 18-23W TDP and won't go over that. Resulting in terrible stutter and then the game quitting.
It seems to be a result of AMD's botched 'removal' of Power Efficiency from the last Adrenalin drivers.
Fair heads-up to all users, you will need to get the Visual C++ 2019 Redistributable runtimes if your system doesn't have them.
TPU has them all in one convenient package;
www.techpowerup.com/download/visual-c-redistributable-runtime-package-all-in-one/
Anyway, that's how it's written, since it's short for Processor Hot and it's referenced as "PROCHOT" in both AMD and Intel's technical documentation. Changing it so it is... either less offensive or less hilarious (depending on your point of view :D) could invite confusion.
Are you using a software firewall type program that shows ThrottleStop.exe trying to contact someone on the internet? What firewall program do you use so I can do some testing? There is nothing that I have coded into ThrottleStop that needs to contact the internet. ThrottleStop 9.0 is the first version that has been compiled using Visual Studio 2019. Previous versions were compiled with Visual Studio 2013. Perhaps Microsoft is gathering more data on what software people run on their computers. Just following the Intel docs. PROCHOT has been displayed on the main screen of ThrottleStop for more than 5 years. No one ever mentioned that there was a problem before.
The Spanish word that thefumigator and I were talking about isn't exactly common. The... offensive/hilarious use isn't even documented yet in the main Spanish Royal Academy dictionary, only in the americanism dictionary, and the one I was thinking about has been documented only in Argentina and in relatively recent times (I heard the word for the first time as early as a decade and half ago, I think, which is not a lot of time).
Frankly, I wouldn't even worry. "PROCHOT" isn't a term that is exposed to most computer users in the first place and if nothing else it will bring a good laugh or at least a chuckle to anyone who comes across it. I mean, if you're actually tinkering and tweaking enough to come across PROCHOT, you should already know that no one at Intel or AMD would have funny ideas when using that as abbreviation, because it's unlikely that the engineers (or whoever chose how to abbreviate it) knew that it had such meaning in very specific places of the world, specially when such word it's rarely if at all used in formal conversation (it's considered vulgar, after all).
As mentioned, there should never be a reason for ThrottleStop to access the internet.
@btarunr
How come on your screenshot, the readings window (FID, C0%,Mod,Temp,Max) is much bigger, while mine shows only 8 rows? This was the thing I wanted for a long time...
PS: Thanks a lot @unclewebb and @btarunr for sharing :)
Even the latest one I saw offered in Adrenalin, is WHQL, by the looks.
Definitely not constant stuttering and quitting.
100/10 rating, thanks to Kevin Glynn for his amazing work for the people, great man & thanks for TPU for publishing it & NBR community.