Contact PCSHi How can you upgrade to the new CC 3.9.18
Sorry mate I'm not deliberately hounding you.PCS offers 3.1.23 now if you want, you should try it in your accont's download portal. You should be fine if you're ok with disabled PL limits in Office mode (people had told me).
Sorry mate I'm not deliberately hounding you.
Sorry mate I'm not deliberately hounding you.
I just want to point out to anyone reading this as it is important, just because the version of CC you are referring too comes from the same OEM does not mean it is compatible with the Ionico.
The OEM configures each chassis as per the specification of each system reseller. This means they have to configure CC individually for each system reseller.
The CC v3.9.18 which is currently out in the wild has not been configured for the Ionico which is one of the reasons people on this forum will tell users to stay away from it.
Another detailed video, thank you.
Another set of benchmarks, this time on Fortnite, on the same machine:
1080p, 1440p, Low, Med, High and Epic settings, Ray Tracing off and on, all 4 DLSS modes tested.
(all done in dGPU-only mode. Too many variables otherwise)
I see, I was convinced the GPU would receive full wattage as long as the CPU was below 45W, not 25W, all clear now, and thanks for the extra clarification about DLSS, I sure need to inform myself a bit more about such new features, before deciding which laptop, and what setup, to go for.Absolutely it's not a stupid question.
140W are given only if CPU is below 25W, and yes, despite RTSS showed it was ofter there, maybe it was not long enough (e.g. CPU power had fast spikes we can't see) which inhibited this boost.
I could also override (with the latest control center) this Dynamic Boost behavior; and I did but only during the Overclocked part (OC), there you might see more moments w/ the GPU at or > 135W than anywhere else, because it didn't care of how much power the CPU had at the same time.
But D.B.2.0 is there for a reason: to allow not to put too much heat in the laptop (if CPU produces a lot of wattage, GPU can't, and viceversa), so for the longevity of the laptop / lower noise, I sticked with normal Nvidia 125+15 state for the rest of the video.
EDIT: adds to that: every time I set a DLSS mode actually the resolution of the screen was a LOT lower than the final one (then magically upscaled). The lower the resolution, the quickest we reach the bottleneck of the CPU. It might be a case where the internal resolution got like 1280x720, then upscaled to 2560x1440 (probably DLSS Performance). The lower resoluton pumps a lot of stress on the CPU. The 10875H can't simply provide so much frames per second to the GPU. The GPU does not require more than much, because the CPU is stalling. Also Zen3 wouldn't do much, btw. That's why DLSS presets are usable only with RayTracing, where the bottlenecks shifts to the GPU, and the CPU breathes again.
Once again, a more exhaustive answer than I expected, much obliged.If I were you and had to buy now, I'd go 5900HX unless hundreds of EUR more. About CPU, In gaming they are in the same ballpark, but for anything else AMD is better.
I'd cheap out on the GPU though (3070 is enough, 3080 too much cost per performance).
Please just note that since a lot of die space in Zen3 is occupied by the L3 cache, the 8 cores are all crammed together -> a lot of heat generated in a single part of the die. It is VERY HARD to pull out heat from there, unless you go Liquid Metal (a thing very hard to apply and not being offered by PCS). Intel Cores occupy like 60% of the die, Cezanne no more than 35%-40%:
View attachment 25568
View attachment 25569
Intel 10875H
This means you might see 95C while gaming on AMD (aka throttling), unless you apply LM with all the precautions by yourself (you need to isolate a lot of circuitry over the die to avoid them touching the LM else bye bye laptop, etc.)
Still, for productivity tasks it seems a lot less hotter than that.
Given the above I'd go for a 17 inch sized if going AMD, instead of 15, at the least. Bigger side radiators, easier to remove heat at the least.
Do note though that in some weeks Tigerlake-H45 comes. It's the very first 8 cores 10nm Intel processor with new architecture. And Tongfang will update their Intel lineup with that. And will offer Thunderbolt 4.0 for that, a thing current 10th gen lacks, because they already designed the same motherboard for TGL-ready and TGL drives the TB straight from the CPU, so our motherboard can't offer TB (lacks the TB controller). For this I'm saying expect a fast refresh of the Tongfang lineup as soon as TGL arrives in full fledge. They will reuse the same motherboard, they just need the Intel shipping the CPU and a new BIOS. And this is the first High performance Intel chip at 10nm. Might be worth a check.
EDIT: Videocardz states that Tigerlake-H45 embargo ends the 10 or 11th of May. First laptops to be presented the 11th. So really couple weeks away.
Yeah, chances are I will be patient then, and wait.PCS are pretty busy so wouldn't get your Octane repaired before the TGL ships I guess... ^^
I feel your pain. My Clevo broke in december and I had to wait 3 months with an old Dell with a Geforce 450GT meanwhile. And some old i7 I don't even know the nm process.. That's why I picked the first RTX30 series laptop I could.
About Tigerlake, at least they should have sorted out any early bugs with the RTX cards. For example the MUX problems fixed with BIOS etc.
Imagine that Zen3 + RTX30 offering got both new CPU and GPU at the same time vs last year, so double the chance to mess up something (for instance TF seems to have cheaped out a bit on the heat pipes, infact, for those). TGL arrival will give you a new CPU, yes, but the RTX 30 is pretty established, now. Just one variable, and probably a simple one (I expect same parameters PL1 and PL2 applies etc.)
Regarding LM I say this because the US system integrator for same Tongfangs is applying LM to handle that heat. It's a very minority the ones who do, but the only way to lower to 88-90C while gaming it seems.
2021-06-0408:00:50 | Active | AC | 100 % | 91.245 mWh |
08:33:00 | Suspended | 100 % | 91.245 mWh | |
13:19:33 | Active | Battery | 100 % | 91.245 mWh |
13:50:52 | Suspended | 92 % | 83.945 mWh | |
13:51:47 | Active | Battery | 92 % | 83.945 mWh |
16:27:27 | Report generated | Battery | 57 % | 52.010 mWh |
START TIME | STATE | DURATION | ENERGY DRAINED | |
2021-06-0413:19:33 | Active | 0:31:19 | 8 % | 7.300 mWh |
1 min standby (note by myself) | ||||
13:51:47 | Active | 2:53:19 | 39 % | 35.585 mWh |