This is wrong. Tau is not a fixed time, it's used to calculate the so-called Exponentially-Weighted Moving Average (EWMA) used by the CPU for determining when PL1 should be engaged. As an example, if you set Tau to 8 seconds, PL1 is 125W and PL2 is 150W, the CPU will maintain PL2 for about 14 seconds. This duration largely depends on the difference between current package power (which may or may not be fixed at PL2) and PL1.
Wrong. With the PL2 at 241W and Tau=128s as reported earlier by kraiggers, the CPU is already going as high as it can. TjMax (by default 100 °C) is the limiting factor here. CPU power will be progressively decreased (that is, throttled) to maintain the temperature fixed at the temperature limit, and as it does so, fan speed ramps up.
By decreasing Tau to just a few seconds and keeping PL2 the same, the CPU will engage PL1 much earlier, ideally before fan speeds start accelerating. This would yield a lower thermal and electrical load than the default configuration.
Let me see if I can clarify how this applies to my situation...
According to what I've seen online, I *think* the default settings for this HP z2 mini g9 are PL1=90w PL2= 241w and Tau=128s for the i9k, and same except PL2=190w for i7k.
Reviews have ALL mentioned this machine getting notably
hot and also therefore
loud under load with the i9 — all the review units have the i9, apparently — and also throttling both power and thermally. This is with the OEM setup already starting with PL1=90w for both i7 and i9, even though PL1 doesn't matter as much under a full testing load. One would assume the cooling in this tiny chassis is insufficient for these chips. Which isn't very surprising — its tiny!
Assuming I am able to set PL2 and Tau with the XTU, the optimal settings for me — preferencing quiet operation over all-out performance — will depend on the workloads I'm doing (cad and adobe, mostly):
If my work is bursty but not so much sustained, I could in theory keep the PL2 somewhat higher (eg 190w like i7k) but control the fan by lowering the Tau and therefore keeping the temps from going too high by throttling down the cpu before things get too hot and the fan goes gonzo.
If my work is more sustained (renders or such line), I would probably need to lower PL2 more aggressively (eg, 125w or whatever low value) while keeping Tau higher to allow the best sustained performance while also holding down the temps to something the fans can handle at acceptable speeds (ie not 7000 rpm!) without getting too loud.
The sweet spot may in fact be some combination of both lowering PL2 more than 190w (like, say to 150w) and ALSO lowering Tau to some value less than 128s — maybe 30s or something. Who knows, I'm just wild-ass guessing until I have the system in hand to experiment. Start high and adjust incrementally; I may not need to do much at all (besides lowering PL2 to 190w) depending on my usage...
Is that a reasonable and accurate description of the situation?
Tangential question — is it worth keeping this order (i9k, 64gb ecc ram, 1 tb ssd, 2nd ssd slot open, rtx a2000) at $1495 incl tax? That seems like a freakishly good price, even for a thermally crippled machine? I
LIKE the tiny footprint, I'm not gaming, and I'm not doing hardcore video or rendering, generally.