![]() If so, what do I need to do to undervolt Strix G laptops? I heard mention of running Windows mode. My question here is whether ASUS Armoury Crate apply its own tweaking as I can see it has its own version of XTU processes running in the background. ![]() I don't really have any experience dealing with 9750h but my last laptop with 6700h had no problem pushing past 150mV. I tried to use ThrottleStop with Armoury Crate Running and got BSOD at around 120mV. I'd like to set it so it can go faster, but I want to keep the temperature below 190 F/88 C, is there a good way to set the computer not to exceed that temp? What I've done now is set Armoury Crate to Windows mode, and I've so far played a fair bit in my really intense 3D games, seems to lag a bit more and take a bit longer to fully render things, but thus far the temperature has not exceeded 158 F/70 C. That did keep the temperature regulated for my last laptop, but doesn't seem to help much for my current one. Now, I'd normally set Core Temp, when a core reaches, say, 175 F (79 C), to run a batch file with powercfg -setacvalueindex SCHEME_BALANCED SUB_PROCESSOR PROCTHROTTLEMAX 50 This is an indication to a severe overheating issue and should be attended to as soon as possible to prevent instability and damage to components. Note the "(!)" by one of the cores, which Core Temp says: (!) represents a warning notifying the user that his processor has reached a critical temperature at least once while Core Temp has been running. After some time playing, Core Temp reads: ![]() Now, I have Core Temp monitoring my temperatures, and I often like to play some heavy 3D games like Planet Coaster with the graphics settings cranked up.
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