Hi, I have this question for a time and I haven't found nothing about it. So I would appreciate if someone could get me a little help.
Currently my FIVR control is with the voltage adjustment unlocked in order to have undervolt. Sometimes I want to brief turn off the offset changes, mainly to test if an application is not working as intend due to undervolting. I have tested and it seems if I just change profile, nothing happens. The offset is still applied even if the profile has the "Unlock Adjustable Voltage" unchecked with zero offset. If I'm not wrong the button "Turn On/Off" in the monitoring screen is legacy and do not actually turn off/on things, right?
What I usually do to get undervolt turned off is turning on Virtual Machine and Hypervision in Window's Features. I also use some android apps sometime, so turning on those features I know undervolt will not work.
Is there any another solution that I can just turn off/turn on undervolt in a easy way? ThrottleStop is set to start by Task Schedule when Windows initiates, so I'm considering just to disable the scheduled task and restart the system, but that is not too much practical.
Currently my FIVR control is with the voltage adjustment unlocked in order to have undervolt. Sometimes I want to brief turn off the offset changes, mainly to test if an application is not working as intend due to undervolting. I have tested and it seems if I just change profile, nothing happens. The offset is still applied even if the profile has the "Unlock Adjustable Voltage" unchecked with zero offset. If I'm not wrong the button "Turn On/Off" in the monitoring screen is legacy and do not actually turn off/on things, right?
What I usually do to get undervolt turned off is turning on Virtual Machine and Hypervision in Window's Features. I also use some android apps sometime, so turning on those features I know undervolt will not work.
Is there any another solution that I can just turn off/turn on undervolt in a easy way? ThrottleStop is set to start by Task Schedule when Windows initiates, so I'm considering just to disable the scheduled task and restart the system, but that is not too much practical.