Hello,
I would like to begin with an apology, I'm not usualy writing reviews/tutorials or anything like that but recently I have managed to achieve some spectacular performance and I would like to share the "knowledge" as I wish I found a guide when I was going through this. This will be long as I think context helps.
I will start with my specs:
Chassis & Display
Octane Series: 17.3" Matte Full HD 144Hz 72% NTSC LED Widescreen (1920x1080) + G-Sync
Processor (CPU)
Intel® Core™ i7 Eight Core Processor i7-9700K (3.6GHz) 12MB Cache
Memory (RAM)
32GB Corsair 2666MHz SODIMM DDR4 (2 x 16GB)
Graphics Card
NVIDIA® GeForce® RTX 2080 - 8.0GB GDDR6 Video RAM - DirectX® 12.1
1st M.2 SSD Drive
1TB SAMSUNG 970 EVO PLUS M.2, PCIe NVMe (up to 3500MB/R, 3300MB/W)
Thermal Paste
COOLER MASTER MASTERGEL MAKER THERMAL COMPOUND
Now a bit of history:
I always wanted a "top end" gaming machine and I always hated laptops, as a true gamer I knew that laptops had big trouble with cooling. However, I managed to land myself a job as an IT Support at a small company and I had to keep using one of them "normal" computers which was as bad as my ability of writing tutorials. I was going to clients often to sort out different issues and I suddenly felt that I need a laptop and now I was able to afford one. I then decided I want the "best laptop" money can buy with a 3k spending limit. A colleague at work then recommended me PcSpecialist (based on what I'm about to write you might think that I don't like PcSpecialist but hold tight, it's a whole story).
I chose Octane VI for a few reasons.
1. It was running a desktop CPU. I was a bit worried about the cooling capabilities but looking at the forums here I noticed that most people were ok with the temps so I decided to go for it.
2. You could fit a RTX2080 desktop GPU (I really wanted the supreme laptop).
3. The chasis was not very crowded and it made it easy to clean/upgrade/teak, etc.
4. I like big machines, big screen, running 144hz.
I was finally able to order it on 12/02/2019 and it came home one-two weeks later (I was sweating bullets by this time, I was so excited.
I quickly installed windows, drivers, CC, all the good stuff, had a few issues with Nvidia Control Panel (wasn't showing up) but nothing to put me off, I mean... working as as IT Support makes you a bit less sensitive with stuff like this, it's "normal" for me to encounter problems and fix them.
The next thing I've done, installed BF5 (it came with the laptop), take everything to absolute maximum and enjoy. After a minute, fans were at full blast ( I wasn't expecting anything else to be honest) and I decided to install Hardware Monitor (will refer it as HWM in the future). I was a bit shocked to see my temps were 100°C on all cores, GPU was doing 85°C (that was ok). I have to mention that I haven't tweaked any parameters at this point so the laptop was doing it's thing with factory settings.
I started browsing forums, looking if anybody else was getting this kind of temperatures using my setup, didn't find much. While I was doing this, leaving HWM running I noticed that even when I'm not gaming the processor (which was running at 4.9ghz, factory as I said) was still doing temperatures in excess of 70°C (in idle).
My first thoughts were: Either they put the "cheap" thermal paste ( I had paid for the "better" one) or the paste was applied incorrectly or maybe a combination of both. So I took the laptop apart (heatsink), I noticed the paste was covering the entire surface of the processor and then I started getting a bit scared. I cleaned everything and reapplied some thermal paste (Arctic MX4), I also noticed the heatsink has a scratch right where it was sitting on the processor and it wasn't completly straight. Put everything back together, no changes. Of course I reached PcSpecialist, sent them the Laptop back, told them what the problem was, and asked them to change my heatsink as I didn't think it was sitting properly on the CPU. The process was easy, I'll give them that, they are extremly polite and happy to help. This is what they came up with.
"I now have your system and have begun investigating the thermal issues you have been experiencing. So far I have found that your system idle temperatures are 50°C on the CPU. The high's of 70°C+ are being caused by the system being put under load performing startup tasks. In my testing the CPU reached over 80% usage performing the startup tasks such as loading steam, discord etc... After leaving the system on the desktop for about 10 minutes I found that the system settled back down to 50°C at idle. When testing the thermals under load I found that the cause of your high temperatures are due to the CPU boosting to it's performance clock of 4.6GHz all the way up until the CPU reaches 95°C+. Only once it reaches this threshold does the CPU scale back to it's stock speed of 3.6GHz. Once it has scaled back the temperature levels out at 70°C and maintains the 3.6GHz clock. I am currently in the process of using the Intel XTU utility to manually control the boost clocks of the system in hopes of preventing the system from getting too hot to begin with. Once I have dialled in some sensible settings I will let you know what they are to see if you are happy with them as this will reduce the maximum performance of the system in order to provide better sustained performance."
They sent me the laptop back, temperatures were a bit different then what I thought they would be but not much different so I was happy with this.
Playing with XTU I started to keep my CPU in 3.6ghz and only take it higher when more processing power was required for higher FPS (usually in shooters).
Keeping it in 3.6ghz I was able to play most of my games with maximum details 1080p at around 75-85°C with the fans running 80%, not bad right ?
It then went like this untill november 2019 when I decided to clean my laptop and reapply thermal paste, used the Arctic MX-4 again. The result ? I arranged an RMA two days after. The reason ? I'll copy and paste part of the RMA ticket I wrote.
"Two days ago I removed the dust and reapplied thermal paste (Arctic MX4), since then my computer peaks at 95-100°C while in load all that in 3.6ghz (on all 8 cores), before I could take it to 4.4Ghz-4.5Ghz for it to put up this kind of temperatures, I thought I didn't apply the thermal compound properly and redid the job with same results. I looked on forums and I noticed that there is a "fix" to get temperatures to drop down on this chasis by putting something betwen the brackets of the heat pipe (so it would apply more preasure on the heatsink), I didn't know if I would lose my warranty for trying that so I didn't. What I've done instead was to apply more pressure on the heat pipe while doing a stress test and I could see the difference straight away, with constant pressure the temperature dropped by up to 15°C in some cases. "
At this point I would like to apologise for my English as it's not my first language and I do tend to make mistakes when I'm under pressure, moving on.
The laptop came back, had it's motherboard changed (one USB was gone so they replaced my motherboard) however I haven't seen anybody with this problem on the forum so don't let this count as a bad mark. The heatsink was also changed and that made me very happy. The laptop was finally ok now, running 75°C in 3.6ghz, same games, the only difference now I had two external monitors, 1x 2k 144hz and 1x 1080p 60hz ( you do need a lot of screens if you work as a support, or I'm not sure need it's the word, but it's nice to have). So my laptop was cool enough (even though it was loud).
Fast foward to a few days ago.
I decided it was time to clean my laptop again, I like to do it every 3-4-5 months to keep things smooth (I do take great care of my stuff, I hate waste, my laptop is being used as a desktop mostly as I have two external monitors and I chose to do it this way so I don't put a lot of psysical stress on it, it still looks like brand new).
Given that my warranty ran out by now I decided I try that fix I was talking about, it's called "clevo paperclip mod" and I won't link it here as I don't know if this is going to void your warranty or not, nor do I recommend it for non-techy people. So, what have I done ?
Well first I thought I would for once try another cooling paste rather than the Arctic MX-4 I used for the last 6 years or so. I spent a couple of hours doing research and I decided to give Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut a chance as it had good reviews by home consumers ( I don't watch sponsored content when it comes to things like this, I like to know the opinion of regular users not people that get paid to review stuff).
I also ordered Arctic Silver ArctiClean Thermal Material Remover & Surface Purifier to be able to clean everything properly.
Upon taking the heatsink out of the laptop much to my surprise, there was a lot of thermal paste, when I say a lot, I mean, I never seen anything like that in my life, with the excess that spread around the GPU I could've done like 3 different computers. On top of that, the CPU wasn't evently covered.
It took me around an hour to completly clean the old thermal paste(most of it was on the heatsink and I didn't take a picture unfortunately). I then applied the Thermal Grizzly following the instructions they supplied (they give you a little spatule so you can evenly spread it on the CPU/GPU). I know there are a few ways of applying thermal paste, I have tried them all, but, at least for me this has had the best results. I also added some wooden 2-3mm pieces under betwen the heatsink brackets. It looks like this:
I would like to begin with an apology, I'm not usualy writing reviews/tutorials or anything like that but recently I have managed to achieve some spectacular performance and I would like to share the "knowledge" as I wish I found a guide when I was going through this. This will be long as I think context helps.
I will start with my specs:
Chassis & Display
Octane Series: 17.3" Matte Full HD 144Hz 72% NTSC LED Widescreen (1920x1080) + G-Sync
Processor (CPU)
Intel® Core™ i7 Eight Core Processor i7-9700K (3.6GHz) 12MB Cache
Memory (RAM)
32GB Corsair 2666MHz SODIMM DDR4 (2 x 16GB)
Graphics Card
NVIDIA® GeForce® RTX 2080 - 8.0GB GDDR6 Video RAM - DirectX® 12.1
1st M.2 SSD Drive
1TB SAMSUNG 970 EVO PLUS M.2, PCIe NVMe (up to 3500MB/R, 3300MB/W)
Thermal Paste
COOLER MASTER MASTERGEL MAKER THERMAL COMPOUND
Now a bit of history:
I always wanted a "top end" gaming machine and I always hated laptops, as a true gamer I knew that laptops had big trouble with cooling. However, I managed to land myself a job as an IT Support at a small company and I had to keep using one of them "normal" computers which was as bad as my ability of writing tutorials. I was going to clients often to sort out different issues and I suddenly felt that I need a laptop and now I was able to afford one. I then decided I want the "best laptop" money can buy with a 3k spending limit. A colleague at work then recommended me PcSpecialist (based on what I'm about to write you might think that I don't like PcSpecialist but hold tight, it's a whole story).
I chose Octane VI for a few reasons.
1. It was running a desktop CPU. I was a bit worried about the cooling capabilities but looking at the forums here I noticed that most people were ok with the temps so I decided to go for it.
2. You could fit a RTX2080 desktop GPU (I really wanted the supreme laptop).
3. The chasis was not very crowded and it made it easy to clean/upgrade/teak, etc.
4. I like big machines, big screen, running 144hz.
I was finally able to order it on 12/02/2019 and it came home one-two weeks later (I was sweating bullets by this time, I was so excited.
I quickly installed windows, drivers, CC, all the good stuff, had a few issues with Nvidia Control Panel (wasn't showing up) but nothing to put me off, I mean... working as as IT Support makes you a bit less sensitive with stuff like this, it's "normal" for me to encounter problems and fix them.
The next thing I've done, installed BF5 (it came with the laptop), take everything to absolute maximum and enjoy. After a minute, fans were at full blast ( I wasn't expecting anything else to be honest) and I decided to install Hardware Monitor (will refer it as HWM in the future). I was a bit shocked to see my temps were 100°C on all cores, GPU was doing 85°C (that was ok). I have to mention that I haven't tweaked any parameters at this point so the laptop was doing it's thing with factory settings.
I started browsing forums, looking if anybody else was getting this kind of temperatures using my setup, didn't find much. While I was doing this, leaving HWM running I noticed that even when I'm not gaming the processor (which was running at 4.9ghz, factory as I said) was still doing temperatures in excess of 70°C (in idle).
My first thoughts were: Either they put the "cheap" thermal paste ( I had paid for the "better" one) or the paste was applied incorrectly or maybe a combination of both. So I took the laptop apart (heatsink), I noticed the paste was covering the entire surface of the processor and then I started getting a bit scared. I cleaned everything and reapplied some thermal paste (Arctic MX4), I also noticed the heatsink has a scratch right where it was sitting on the processor and it wasn't completly straight. Put everything back together, no changes. Of course I reached PcSpecialist, sent them the Laptop back, told them what the problem was, and asked them to change my heatsink as I didn't think it was sitting properly on the CPU. The process was easy, I'll give them that, they are extremly polite and happy to help. This is what they came up with.
"I now have your system and have begun investigating the thermal issues you have been experiencing. So far I have found that your system idle temperatures are 50°C on the CPU. The high's of 70°C+ are being caused by the system being put under load performing startup tasks. In my testing the CPU reached over 80% usage performing the startup tasks such as loading steam, discord etc... After leaving the system on the desktop for about 10 minutes I found that the system settled back down to 50°C at idle. When testing the thermals under load I found that the cause of your high temperatures are due to the CPU boosting to it's performance clock of 4.6GHz all the way up until the CPU reaches 95°C+. Only once it reaches this threshold does the CPU scale back to it's stock speed of 3.6GHz. Once it has scaled back the temperature levels out at 70°C and maintains the 3.6GHz clock. I am currently in the process of using the Intel XTU utility to manually control the boost clocks of the system in hopes of preventing the system from getting too hot to begin with. Once I have dialled in some sensible settings I will let you know what they are to see if you are happy with them as this will reduce the maximum performance of the system in order to provide better sustained performance."
They sent me the laptop back, temperatures were a bit different then what I thought they would be but not much different so I was happy with this.
Playing with XTU I started to keep my CPU in 3.6ghz and only take it higher when more processing power was required for higher FPS (usually in shooters).
Keeping it in 3.6ghz I was able to play most of my games with maximum details 1080p at around 75-85°C with the fans running 80%, not bad right ?
It then went like this untill november 2019 when I decided to clean my laptop and reapply thermal paste, used the Arctic MX-4 again. The result ? I arranged an RMA two days after. The reason ? I'll copy and paste part of the RMA ticket I wrote.
"Two days ago I removed the dust and reapplied thermal paste (Arctic MX4), since then my computer peaks at 95-100°C while in load all that in 3.6ghz (on all 8 cores), before I could take it to 4.4Ghz-4.5Ghz for it to put up this kind of temperatures, I thought I didn't apply the thermal compound properly and redid the job with same results. I looked on forums and I noticed that there is a "fix" to get temperatures to drop down on this chasis by putting something betwen the brackets of the heat pipe (so it would apply more preasure on the heatsink), I didn't know if I would lose my warranty for trying that so I didn't. What I've done instead was to apply more pressure on the heat pipe while doing a stress test and I could see the difference straight away, with constant pressure the temperature dropped by up to 15°C in some cases. "
At this point I would like to apologise for my English as it's not my first language and I do tend to make mistakes when I'm under pressure, moving on.
The laptop came back, had it's motherboard changed (one USB was gone so they replaced my motherboard) however I haven't seen anybody with this problem on the forum so don't let this count as a bad mark. The heatsink was also changed and that made me very happy. The laptop was finally ok now, running 75°C in 3.6ghz, same games, the only difference now I had two external monitors, 1x 2k 144hz and 1x 1080p 60hz ( you do need a lot of screens if you work as a support, or I'm not sure need it's the word, but it's nice to have). So my laptop was cool enough (even though it was loud).
Fast foward to a few days ago.
I decided it was time to clean my laptop again, I like to do it every 3-4-5 months to keep things smooth (I do take great care of my stuff, I hate waste, my laptop is being used as a desktop mostly as I have two external monitors and I chose to do it this way so I don't put a lot of psysical stress on it, it still looks like brand new).
Given that my warranty ran out by now I decided I try that fix I was talking about, it's called "clevo paperclip mod" and I won't link it here as I don't know if this is going to void your warranty or not, nor do I recommend it for non-techy people. So, what have I done ?
Well first I thought I would for once try another cooling paste rather than the Arctic MX-4 I used for the last 6 years or so. I spent a couple of hours doing research and I decided to give Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut a chance as it had good reviews by home consumers ( I don't watch sponsored content when it comes to things like this, I like to know the opinion of regular users not people that get paid to review stuff).
I also ordered Arctic Silver ArctiClean Thermal Material Remover & Surface Purifier to be able to clean everything properly.
Upon taking the heatsink out of the laptop much to my surprise, there was a lot of thermal paste, when I say a lot, I mean, I never seen anything like that in my life, with the excess that spread around the GPU I could've done like 3 different computers. On top of that, the CPU wasn't evently covered.
It took me around an hour to completly clean the old thermal paste(most of it was on the heatsink and I didn't take a picture unfortunately). I then applied the Thermal Grizzly following the instructions they supplied (they give you a little spatule so you can evenly spread it on the CPU/GPU). I know there are a few ways of applying thermal paste, I have tried them all, but, at least for me this has had the best results. I also added some wooden 2-3mm pieces under betwen the heatsink brackets. It looks like this:
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