Hi everyone, I've got a new 17" Defiance with an i7 Eight Core 10870H and RTX 3080 Max-Q (will post full spec below), and I've been struggling to set it up due to my anxiety issues over getting used to new pieces of technology. (Plus it had a screen hardware issue which I had to send back to PCS twice to fix.)
I've almost got it all there, but the thing I've noticed bothering me recently is that the fans sometimes run VERY loud. (Loud enough to hear elsewhere in the house!) I've yet to try running any games on it, so this is just when the CPU is under load (e.g. installing Windows updates or Steam games). I've looked at the temperatures in the Control Center 3.0, and they seem to be at around 80°c at most (which I understand is within normal tolerance for CPUs these days), but still the fans come on very strongly.
The laptop is sitting flat on a desk, and I have the CC3.0 set with the "Entertainment" profile and the fans set to Automatic. I also found out from other threads that I should set Windows' power plan back to "Balanced", so as not to have the processor trying to run at 100% all the time.
Still the laptop is very thin so it can obviously easily heat up. The heat is only physically noticeable when I touch the underside of the laptop, which is better than my previous laptop (which was much thicker) where you could feel heat on the same surface as the keyboard.
So I'm looking for some tips to help reduce the fan noise while obviously still keeping my hardware safe.
1) What is the "Offset" meter in the CC3.0, shown when fans are set to Automatic? Am I right in thinking it's a setting to set a minimum percentage for the fans? I take it there's no way to set a maximum fan percentage?
2) There is also the option to set custom fan percentages at two temperature points. Has anyone found a good set up with this that keeps fans effective but quiet? What if I try having the fans set to moderate strength at low temperatures (say, 35-40% at 30°c), to be on top of things before they really heat up, but then only have the fans increase a little bit as temperatures rise (say, 50% at 80°c)?
3) Are laptop cooling pads just seen as a necessity these days? I'd rather not get one if I don't have to, as I prefer to have the laptop just flat on the desk.
4) I've also come across (though not yet tried) something that seems to be an effective solution for reducing temps. People have suggested setting the processor's maximum power state to 99% (in Windows' advanced power settings), so that it doesn't Turbo Boost. This apparently reduces temps by 20°c, but obviously has some effect on performance. My i7 CPU says it has eight cores at 2.2GHz; and 5.0GHz when Turbo boosted. Will the eight 2.2GHz cores, combined with the strong GPU, still give me good game performance, even in CPU-heavy titles like the Total War games? I'm happy to have my max FPS set to just 60, as that's what I'm used to, but would like to be able to use my GPU to run things at top settings.
Will reducing the CPU to 99% have any noticeable effect on other day to day activities?
Sorry for all the long-winded questions. I'm just trying to get it set up in a way I'm comfortable with, and so was wondering what other people have done to help them.
FULL SPECS:
I've almost got it all there, but the thing I've noticed bothering me recently is that the fans sometimes run VERY loud. (Loud enough to hear elsewhere in the house!) I've yet to try running any games on it, so this is just when the CPU is under load (e.g. installing Windows updates or Steam games). I've looked at the temperatures in the Control Center 3.0, and they seem to be at around 80°c at most (which I understand is within normal tolerance for CPUs these days), but still the fans come on very strongly.
The laptop is sitting flat on a desk, and I have the CC3.0 set with the "Entertainment" profile and the fans set to Automatic. I also found out from other threads that I should set Windows' power plan back to "Balanced", so as not to have the processor trying to run at 100% all the time.
Still the laptop is very thin so it can obviously easily heat up. The heat is only physically noticeable when I touch the underside of the laptop, which is better than my previous laptop (which was much thicker) where you could feel heat on the same surface as the keyboard.
So I'm looking for some tips to help reduce the fan noise while obviously still keeping my hardware safe.
1) What is the "Offset" meter in the CC3.0, shown when fans are set to Automatic? Am I right in thinking it's a setting to set a minimum percentage for the fans? I take it there's no way to set a maximum fan percentage?
2) There is also the option to set custom fan percentages at two temperature points. Has anyone found a good set up with this that keeps fans effective but quiet? What if I try having the fans set to moderate strength at low temperatures (say, 35-40% at 30°c), to be on top of things before they really heat up, but then only have the fans increase a little bit as temperatures rise (say, 50% at 80°c)?
3) Are laptop cooling pads just seen as a necessity these days? I'd rather not get one if I don't have to, as I prefer to have the laptop just flat on the desk.
4) I've also come across (though not yet tried) something that seems to be an effective solution for reducing temps. People have suggested setting the processor's maximum power state to 99% (in Windows' advanced power settings), so that it doesn't Turbo Boost. This apparently reduces temps by 20°c, but obviously has some effect on performance. My i7 CPU says it has eight cores at 2.2GHz; and 5.0GHz when Turbo boosted. Will the eight 2.2GHz cores, combined with the strong GPU, still give me good game performance, even in CPU-heavy titles like the Total War games? I'm happy to have my max FPS set to just 60, as that's what I'm used to, but would like to be able to use my GPU to run things at top settings.
Will reducing the CPU to 99% have any noticeable effect on other day to day activities?
Sorry for all the long-winded questions. I'm just trying to get it set up in a way I'm comfortable with, and so was wondering what other people have done to help them.
FULL SPECS:
Chassis & Display | Defiance Series: 17.3" Matte Full HD 240Hz 72% NTSC LED Widescreen (1920x1080) |
Processor (CPU) | Intel® Core™ i7 Eight Core Processor 10870H (2.2GHz, 5.0GHz Turbo) |
Memory (RAM) | 32GB Corsair 2666MHz SODIMM DDR4 (2 x 16GB) |
Graphics Card | NVIDIA® GeForce® RTX 3080 Max-Q - 16.0GB GDDR6 Video RAM - DirectX® 12.1 |
1st M.2 SSD Drive | 250GB SAMSUNG 970 EVO PLUS M.2, PCIe NVMe (up to 3500MB/R, 2300MB/W) |
2nd M.2 SSD Drive | 2TB SAMSUNG 970 EVO PLUS M.2, PCIe NVMe (up to 3500MB/R, 3300MB/W) |
Memory Card Reader | Integrated Micro-SD Memory Card Reader |
AC Adaptor | 1 x 180W AC Adaptor |
Power Cable | 1 x 1 Metre Cloverleaf UK Power Cable |
Battery | Defiance Series Integrated 3 Cell Lithium Ion Battery (73WH) |
Thermal Paste | ARCTIC MX-4 EXTREME THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY COMPOUND |
Sound Card | 2 Channel High Definition Audio + MIC/Headphone Jack |
Bluetooth & Wireless | GIGABIT LAN & KILLER™ Wi-Fi 6 AX1650 M.2 GAMING + BLUETOOTH 5.0 |
USB/Thunderbolt Options | 1 x THUNDERBOLT 3 PORT + 3 x USB 3.2 PORTS |
Keyboard Language | 17" DEFIANCE SERIES UK KEYBOARD |
Operating System | Windows 10 Home 64 Bit - inc. Single Licence [KUK-00001] |
Operating System Language | United Kingdom - English Language |
Windows Recovery Media | Windows 10 Multi-Language Recovery Image - Unlimited Downloads from Online Account |
Office Software | Microsoft® Office Home & Student 2019 (1 Digital License) |
Anti-Virus | NO ANTI-VIRUS SOFTWARE |
Browser | Google Chrome™ |
Notebook Mouse | INTEGRATED 2 BUTTON TOUCHPAD MOUSE |
Webcam | INTEGRATED 1MP HD WEBCAM |
Warranty | 3 Year Silver Warranty (1 Year Collect & Return, 1 Year Parts, 3 Year Labour) |
Dead Pixel Guarantee | 30 Day Dead Pixel Guarantee Inc. Labour & Carriage Costs |