Yesterday I got my Prostar (reseller of Clevo) N850EP6, equipped with an i7-8750H and GTX 1060 6GB. I also own a desktop with an i7-6700 and GTX 970, which I assume are close in terms of performance (though the 8th gen has more cores).
Right off the bat, with the laptop plugged in, and setting all battery settings to "performance", updating the Nvidia driver to the latest and tweaking the control panel settings, I was met with lag spikes, and an unexpected drop in FPS (ex. in CS:GO, where my desktop FPS would normally be 180 FPS, but the laptop never went above 110).
I was a bit confused considering the laptop had a 144 hz panel, which was actually impossible to achieve considering that the thermal readings were 85-90C max in the lightest of games like Minecraft (which again, shown only an FPS of 90! as compared to my desktop, which was running at 400+).
After reading that the Clevo Control Center app caused some GPU throttling, I was expecting the FPS to be a bit higher after closing it (which it did), but games started lag spiking when hitting that 85-90C zone. Even running at "maximum fan" in CCC before I killed the program failed to keep the temperatures in the 60's and 70's over the course of a few minutes.
I suspect that it's the architecture of the case itself, and the airflow design. While this thermal issue pales in comparison to what I've experienced with my 17.3 inch HP Omen two years ago, I am considering returning this laptop.
Does anyone have any more tips? Has anyone else had this issue? I don't think repasting the CPU would help, either, considering the fact that the computer wasn't even built a week ago and I haven't even put it under heavy load for more than an hour.
Right off the bat, with the laptop plugged in, and setting all battery settings to "performance", updating the Nvidia driver to the latest and tweaking the control panel settings, I was met with lag spikes, and an unexpected drop in FPS (ex. in CS:GO, where my desktop FPS would normally be 180 FPS, but the laptop never went above 110).
I was a bit confused considering the laptop had a 144 hz panel, which was actually impossible to achieve considering that the thermal readings were 85-90C max in the lightest of games like Minecraft (which again, shown only an FPS of 90! as compared to my desktop, which was running at 400+).
After reading that the Clevo Control Center app caused some GPU throttling, I was expecting the FPS to be a bit higher after closing it (which it did), but games started lag spiking when hitting that 85-90C zone. Even running at "maximum fan" in CCC before I killed the program failed to keep the temperatures in the 60's and 70's over the course of a few minutes.
I suspect that it's the architecture of the case itself, and the airflow design. While this thermal issue pales in comparison to what I've experienced with my 17.3 inch HP Omen two years ago, I am considering returning this laptop.
Does anyone have any more tips? Has anyone else had this issue? I don't think repasting the CPU would help, either, considering the fact that the computer wasn't even built a week ago and I haven't even put it under heavy load for more than an hour.