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Cooling is a issue on some of these thinner notebooks, personally I think the fan settings are done in a way to limit fan noise for the end user. Obviously gaming generates a need for cooling which may not be sufficiently handled by the cooling design. I would suggest a cooling pad when gaming, making sure all vents are not in any way restricted or blocked. Yes, it is also unfortunate that bios rollbacks are no longer allowed. Some of this resulted from the whole Spectre/Meltdown thing. It is also possible your PC has a issue possible which the cooling hardware not being properly installed such as poor heat sink compound applied, or a loose heat sink causing a bad connection with the CPU/GPU. I will say that Intel seems to have little problem with 100c temps as long as they remain at that level and do not creep up.
I have a stand, its effect is 5-7 degrees, so it is not a solution. As for the incorrect installation of the cooling equipment, I don’t know I didn’t look, maybe I will have to do it soon, I just don’t really understand this.
And yes, I have not seen temperatures above 100 degrees, but temperatures above 95 degrees cause throttling, which is a problem for me because of the short-term lags
Well if its throttling that's not good for gaming. Not specific to this model, but I am skeptical of PC makers installing these higher performance CPU's in thin notebooks. I just don't think they properly can cool when pushed. I mean I have a Dell 5593 with a 10th gen core i5 and just basic tasks can sometimes create some serious heat. Of course the big issues here is that there is no real practical way of improving the cooling design other then trying fan programs to force fan to run fast or trying better heat sink paste to try and improve what you have.
I understand all this and the same opinion about powerful processors, it does not show all its effectiveness, at least in my laptop, and as I understand it, many laptops have that, powerful hardware is just for show. Therefore, I wanted to at least drive the processor into some kind of framework so that it would not heat up so much, that would certainly not solve all the problems, but it helped a lot of people.
I own a Dell 7567 and I have exactly the same problem. My cpu temps increased after applying last Bios update 1.12.1. Bios does not allow me to roll back to previous Bios version. Pls fix it soon.
DELL-Cares
Moderator
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27.6K Posts
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May 27th, 2020 10:00
Thank you! We have received the required details. We will work towards a resolution via private messages to ensure the security of your information. In the meanwhile, you may receive assistance or suggestions from the community members as well.
Johnnythegeek
2 Intern
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247 Posts
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May 27th, 2020 11:00
Cooling is a issue on some of these thinner notebooks, personally I think the fan settings are done in a way to limit fan noise for the end user. Obviously gaming generates a need for cooling which may not be sufficiently handled by the cooling design. I would suggest a cooling pad when gaming, making sure all vents are not in any way restricted or blocked. Yes, it is also unfortunate that bios rollbacks are no longer allowed. Some of this resulted from the whole Spectre/Meltdown thing. It is also possible your PC has a issue possible which the cooling hardware not being properly installed such as poor heat sink compound applied, or a loose heat sink causing a bad connection with the CPU/GPU. I will say that Intel seems to have little problem with 100c temps as long as they remain at that level and do not creep up.
Juk
3 Posts
0
May 27th, 2020 12:00
I have a stand, its effect is 5-7 degrees, so it is not a solution. As for the incorrect installation of the cooling equipment, I don’t know I didn’t look, maybe I will have to do it soon, I just don’t really understand this.
And yes, I have not seen temperatures above 100 degrees, but temperatures above 95 degrees cause throttling, which is a problem for me because of the short-term lags
@Johnnythegeek
Johnnythegeek
2 Intern
•
247 Posts
0
May 27th, 2020 12:00
Well if its throttling that's not good for gaming. Not specific to this model, but I am skeptical of PC makers installing these higher performance CPU's in thin notebooks. I just don't think they properly can cool when pushed. I mean I have a Dell 5593 with a 10th gen core i5 and just basic tasks can sometimes create some serious heat. Of course the big issues here is that there is no real practical way of improving the cooling design other then trying fan programs to force fan to run fast or trying better heat sink paste to try and improve what you have.
Juk
3 Posts
0
May 27th, 2020 12:00
I understand all this and the same opinion about powerful processors, it does not show all its effectiveness, at least in my laptop, and as I understand it, many laptops have that, powerful hardware is just for show. Therefore, I wanted to at least drive the processor into some kind of framework so that it would not heat up so much, that would certainly not solve all the problems, but it helped a lot of people.
@Johnnythegeek
Sharp1903
1 Message
0
October 4th, 2020 15:00
I own a Dell 7567 and I have exactly the same problem. My cpu temps increased after applying last Bios update 1.12.1. Bios does not allow me to roll back to previous Bios version. Pls fix it soon.