Hello! Recently I got myself a retired Dell Precision 3530 with an Intel Core i7-8750H (which is essentially Latitude 5591 with a dGPU) at my company. Thanks to them disabling the BIOS updates in their Windows 10 Enterprise, it was preserved with an old BIOS up until I bought it. I was able to undervolt rather well, and overall I got a great machine for its price - but I made a rookie mistake:
Apparently, Dell blocks BIOS downgrades outright if it has "critical security updates", which, judging by the amount of angry people who reported more heat, noise and outrageous idle power consumption, I assume, is a codeword for "critical planned obsolescence shenanigans". The last BIOS version for Latitude 5591 and Precision 3530 that supports undervolting is 1.10, which came out in September 2019 (before roughly November 2019 when they started locking it down). I am currently at 1.33 and I can only downgrade to 1.30
I decided that I would try my luck at the next trading window and I found an even more fantastic deal for me - a Latitude 5501 with an i7-9850H. I don't need a dGPU because I don't game and hardly ever use NVENC for anything (Intel QSV is great enough), but a fast CPU and better battery life due to no dGPU are much needed. The hardware layout seems worse, though, and the 97Wh batteries are not as easy to find as the Precision 3530's 92Wh was, but the CPU makes it worth buying for the $150 it sells for in my country. They seem to have a BIOS version 1.3.2 dating back to August 2019, and the later BIOS versions only came out later. So since the 9th gen CPUs appear to support undervolting too, is this laptop guaranteed to support undervolting?
- I didn't read if BIOS downgrading was possible, or necessary, for undervolting to work;
- I didn't turn off UEFI Capsule Updates in the Dell BIOS;
- I let Windows update my drivers automatically.
- ??????
- -15-20% performance, quietness and battery life loss in an instant!
Apparently, Dell blocks BIOS downgrades outright if it has "critical security updates", which, judging by the amount of angry people who reported more heat, noise and outrageous idle power consumption, I assume, is a codeword for "critical planned obsolescence shenanigans". The last BIOS version for Latitude 5591 and Precision 3530 that supports undervolting is 1.10, which came out in September 2019 (before roughly November 2019 when they started locking it down). I am currently at 1.33 and I can only downgrade to 1.30
I decided that I would try my luck at the next trading window and I found an even more fantastic deal for me - a Latitude 5501 with an i7-9850H. I don't need a dGPU because I don't game and hardly ever use NVENC for anything (Intel QSV is great enough), but a fast CPU and better battery life due to no dGPU are much needed. The hardware layout seems worse, though, and the 97Wh batteries are not as easy to find as the Precision 3530's 92Wh was, but the CPU makes it worth buying for the $150 it sells for in my country. They seem to have a BIOS version 1.3.2 dating back to August 2019, and the later BIOS versions only came out later. So since the 9th gen CPUs appear to support undervolting too, is this laptop guaranteed to support undervolting?