Jester Maroc :
Gibsonlespaul123 :
Terrorsquad1990 :
Gibsonlespaul123 :
Terrorsquad1990 :
Gibsonlespaul123 :
Hello Tom's Hardware,
I've got a new laptop a year ago (HP Envy touchsmart 15) with an i7 4700mq, 16 gb ram and a 840M from Nvidia. It works fine except for one problem: it overheats like a mofo.
During intense games like GTA V, and sometimes even during league of legends, the cpu hits about 97-100 degrees and it starts throttling. The throttling (I assume) causes the entire OS to crash, and the laptop becomes completely unresponsive for about a minute, sometimes 2. It completely fucks up any gaming experience.
I've tried an app that let's it throttle at 85 degrees, didn't work. I tried to limit the cpu usage to 50% max, but all to no avail.
What should I do ?
Thanks in advance
If it really hits that high, I'm not quite sure we can do anything, even with a 3rd-party laptop cooler.
Some laptops are made to game, others are not.
The more it reaches those high temps, the worse it gets in the long run aswel.
Keep the laptop for stuff it is meant to be and save up for a decent gaming desktop/laptop.
But I am curious; was it always like that since the beginning with the same games?
Yes, it's been like this since the beginning. I've never been an HP fan, but this laptop cost about $700 so it seemed to good of a deal to pass on. Now I realise that they've compensated on the build quality and cooling solutions to achieve the low price. To me it seems clear that the laptop is just not capable of handling a quad core cpu and a discrete gpu ....
Laptops are more meant to take along your way for your work/school etc.
Even those expensive "gaming laptops" will not receive any money from me as laptops are not good in the longrun due temp issues and the HDD stuck into an oven.
If people are looking for a gaming laptop around me, I always ask if it's not possible to take a desktop instead of a laptop to avoid many issues and gain alot of more performance.
I agree with your statement that laptops are more meant to be for work/school and stuff, but if I buy a laptop with solid specs, I at least expect those specs to work. Otherwise it's HP's fault for bringing out a laptop that can't handle it's own components.
Agreed, plus many people need the mobility (it can be a necessity) and do not have enough money to purchase both a laptop and a desktop. My Dell Latitude e6540 can game quite comfortably without going above 75c, so laptop gaming is possible and convenient where a desktop is impractical.
I never said it would not perform the same way.
What I do say is that it will NEVER live as long as a desktop will due the temps.
I totally agree the mobility is a huge plus. But that's the only plus it has.
The money u spend on repair after a year and the years to come will be much more than the worth of a desktop, which is also my point.
If you can use a desktop, use it.
Btw, many desktops can outperform laptops for less money so money should not be an issue if mobility is no factor.