Windows 10 Freaking slow.. help please

Jul 3, 2018
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Hello guys, i'm doing this thread because i have problems with my PC and couldn't find a fix anywhere lol.. Maybe some of you could help me out a bit

I currently have a notebook which i bought last month, BGH; i3 6006u, 4gb ram and windows 10..
It was working perfectly, i could run games like csgo, warface.. etc

But it was til 2 days ago when i came back from school and when i went to use it it was Removed slow and i don't know why, it barely runs cs2d (a counter strike 2d game i play), i get fps spikes on simple things; like turning on the flashlight, explosions, etc.

I tried restoring it to an older point or something like that, disabled alot of things on services.msc including superfetch, ran the antivirus, used ccleaner, delete some games, programs, disabled firewall, windows defender, defragged and optimized the disk, alot of crazy things!!
Maybe the Hardisk is damaged? The pc turned off one time when i was playing, maybe it damaged it, or the proccesor?
Or maybe for leaving it on hours downloading games?, i have no idea, but nothing seems to fix this..
I really need it to use it for school porpuses and i don't have money to afford a new one..

All browsers lag, on the desktop when i select with the mouse it lags too, everything lags...

Watch the language, the use of profanity is not allowed here :no:
 
Solution
Either a sensor on the motherboard or a sensor in the power adapter is sending a signal to your CPU causing it to throttle. It uses the BD PROCHOT signal path which stands for bi-directional processor hot. This is a way for other sensors to throttle your CPU. It tricks the CPU into thinking it is too hot even when the CPU temperature is not hot at all.

Once a sensor goes bad, it will continuously send a signal to your CPU which throttles it to its lowest possible speed regardless of load. Common problem. The only way to fix this is to start replacing parts. It is either the power adapter or the motherboard. Those are expensive repairs. Much easier to simply use ThrottleStop to handle this problem for you. Disabling BD PROCHOT...
4 GB of RAM is minimal. When your available RAM is overloaded, Windows starts paging and swapping things in and out. This means that instead of accessing things in times of nanoseconds, it has to go to the hard drive which operates in milliseconds. That's a difference of a million in speed. If you have the 64 bit version of Windows installed (you didn't say), get yourself another 4 GB. 4 GB DDR4 DIMMs sell for around $50.
 


Yeah i guess, i do have 64, but i don't know if i can add another RAM on this notebook, and i have no money for it. But it was working perfectly until some days ago, it was really fast. Now my I3 is worse than an athlon
Anyway windows told me there were no updates available, and on drivers too, but i downloaded driver easy and it told me i got 17 obsolete drivers, i am updating now and i'll see if this problem gets fixed

 
Okay i found the problem but can't fix it yet, it's the processor, the speed is stuck at 0,39GHz and can't make it go back to 1,99GHz except for when i unplug the charger and restart it, it goes back to normal but for a few seconds, then it goes to 0,39GGz again, any ideas?
 
Hey thanks for the advise, i'm not an expert with computers so i wouldn't do it myself, i don't wanna mess up lol
But i suspect it's the bios, i think somehow it wrongly detects my pc is overheated or something, that's why it limits the processor.
Last night i restarted my PC and when i opened the task manager the Processor GHz went up to 1.99 just for a few seconds then it went back to 0.39GHz..
So i downloaded ThrottleStop lastnight, and disabled BD PROCHOT and i had my 1.99GHz back until i restarted the PC, this fix is temporary and i have to do it always i restart my PC
This is the current speed now http://prntscr.com/k2ysgr
It's working fast like before.. But i can't seem to find a permanent fix for it, even if the Power Settings are on High Performance
Really weird

Mod Edit for Language :no:
 
I hope you're aware that the speed shown in Task Manager varies all over the place depending on CPU utilization. That's Intel's way of keeping the heat generated down; it's only a problem if you're running close to 100% CPU busy. As long as the CPU is significantly under 100%, it's not a bottleneck. The temperatures shown in your graphic are all under 45 degrees, but I don't know how typical that is since the CPU utilization shown there is only 2%. What do they look like when the CPU is close to 100% busy?
 
Either a sensor on the motherboard or a sensor in the power adapter is sending a signal to your CPU causing it to throttle. It uses the BD PROCHOT signal path which stands for bi-directional processor hot. This is a way for other sensors to throttle your CPU. It tricks the CPU into thinking it is too hot even when the CPU temperature is not hot at all.

Once a sensor goes bad, it will continuously send a signal to your CPU which throttles it to its lowest possible speed regardless of load. Common problem. The only way to fix this is to start replacing parts. It is either the power adapter or the motherboard. Those are expensive repairs. Much easier to simply use ThrottleStop to handle this problem for you. Disabling BD PROCHOT blocks outside throttling signals from getting to your CPU. If your CPU ever gets too hot, it will throttle and slow down regardless if BD PROCHOT is enabled or disabled.

Here is how to add ThrottleStop to the Windows start up sequence. Do this and you can safely forget about this problem and get back to using your CPU at full speed.

http://forum.notebookreview.com/threads/the-throttlestop-guide.531329/#post-6865107
 
Solution