Hello everyone,
since almost four years, I'm a quite happy owner of a HP Pavilion 15 laptop with the i5-8265U CPU and a 1050 Ti Max-Q GPU. I chose this device as a compromise between a thin and light device and the opportunity of light gaming, without the need to play newer AAA titles.
Early on I moderately undervolted the CPU to have it run cooler and more efficient. I since used several ThrottleStop profiles for max performance, balanced and power-saving scenarios, essentially by using different Speed Shift values of 0, 60, 128 and 196 as well as changing between Windows power plans.
Recently I was curious to see how ThrottleStop developed since then, installed the newest version and read some threads on the forum. Especially this one was interesting to me, as this ULV i7 should be quite similar to my i5, and it's running inside of a thin and light device as well. So I tried to replicate some values and adjust them for my use case. So here's my problem: Whatever values I set for the PL1 and PL2 power limits, they seem to be "overwritten". I tried to moderately increase them to 20W and 25W respectively, as my CPU runs quite cool even under load, never reaching temperatures over 85°C. It seems to work for some time in test benchmarks, but after maybe 40 to 60 seconds, a PL1 of 15W kicks in and throttles the CPU, which then hangs around at 55 to 60°C, with much lower frequencies. Switching between my max performance and balanced profiles seems to make no difference.
So I would like to find out with your help if this indeed is a case of the manufacturer's embedded controller taking over (thanks HP!), essentially rendering my ThrottleStop attempts hopeless, or if there maybe is some hope for me within the options of ThrottleStop that I may haven't found yet. I attached some screens of my current settings as a starting point.
Thanks in advance and best regards
Dominik
since almost four years, I'm a quite happy owner of a HP Pavilion 15 laptop with the i5-8265U CPU and a 1050 Ti Max-Q GPU. I chose this device as a compromise between a thin and light device and the opportunity of light gaming, without the need to play newer AAA titles.
Early on I moderately undervolted the CPU to have it run cooler and more efficient. I since used several ThrottleStop profiles for max performance, balanced and power-saving scenarios, essentially by using different Speed Shift values of 0, 60, 128 and 196 as well as changing between Windows power plans.
Recently I was curious to see how ThrottleStop developed since then, installed the newest version and read some threads on the forum. Especially this one was interesting to me, as this ULV i7 should be quite similar to my i5, and it's running inside of a thin and light device as well. So I tried to replicate some values and adjust them for my use case. So here's my problem: Whatever values I set for the PL1 and PL2 power limits, they seem to be "overwritten". I tried to moderately increase them to 20W and 25W respectively, as my CPU runs quite cool even under load, never reaching temperatures over 85°C. It seems to work for some time in test benchmarks, but after maybe 40 to 60 seconds, a PL1 of 15W kicks in and throttles the CPU, which then hangs around at 55 to 60°C, with much lower frequencies. Switching between my max performance and balanced profiles seems to make no difference.
So I would like to find out with your help if this indeed is a case of the manufacturer's embedded controller taking over (thanks HP!), essentially rendering my ThrottleStop attempts hopeless, or if there maybe is some hope for me within the options of ThrottleStop that I may haven't found yet. I attached some screens of my current settings as a starting point.
Thanks in advance and best regards
Dominik
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