Aspire VN7-593G CPU Overheating

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Geoloco
Geoloco Member Posts: 2 New User
edited March 2023 in 2017 Archives
Hello,
I recently bought this new laptop, it seems to operate smooth but when I use CoreTemp to monitor my temperatures, i get max Temps around 77-84C after running the program for a little while, without running anything demanding. Just by using google chrome or watching a movie, or even if I leave the notebook idle for a while i get these max temps... Is this normal?
Additionally to this I tried to play one online game (Dota2), which should not be really demanding... and my cpu temps reached 99C!!!! That's not safe isn't it?
Anyway for the time being I keep my cpu at a safe temperature range, I set it to operate at 80% of its capacity. Like this (80%) I get "normal" temps when idleing and gaming..
Any ideas? should I RMA? RMAing it would be really bad for me right now because I need it every day for my studies and I dont have another PC..

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Answers

  • brummyfan2
    brummyfan2 ACE Posts: 28,104 Trailblazer
    edited October 2017 Answer ✓
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    Hi,
    Your temps(77-84 C) in normal operation looks fine, you could reduce the Maximum Processor State to 50-60% in Advanced Power Options settings and see whether it reduces the temps.
    I would suggest you to use Throttlestop to undervolt your CPU to control the temps, you won't see any reduced performance by undervolting and it's safe, complete instructions are in the link below.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K1srWgovdn8
    http://forum.notebookreview.com/threads/the-throttlestop-guide.531329/
  • Geoloco
    Geoloco Member Posts: 2 New User
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    > @brummyfan2 said:
    > Hi,
    > Your temps(77-84 C) in normal operation looks fine, you could reduce the Maximum Processor State to 50-60% in Advanced Power Options settings and see whether it reduces the temps.
    > I would suggest you to use Throttlestop to undervolt your CPU to control the temps, you won't see any reduced performance by undervolting and it's safe, complete instructions are in the link below.
    > http://forum.notebookreview.com/threads/the-throttlestop-guide.531329/

    Hi, thanks for the quick reply.

    As I already mentioned, reducing the Maximum Processor State to 80% seems to fix the issue.

    I would really like to use my cpu's full capacity, because soon I will be running huge matlab numerical codes and cpu frequency is the only factor that can speed up these processes. I will try to undervolt with this Throttlestop software you mentioned. Im not familiar with it. Do you think I can use my cpu @ 100% State and have normal temps if I undervolt a little? At least in Normal operation.
    I will consider a cooling pad for when I run the high cpu demanding matlab scripts, or when gaming But I would rather not use it when just in normal operation.

    Also is it possible that I damaged some component this one time when I gamed a dota2 game for about 20 minutes @ 99C?

    Thank you a lot.
  • brummyfan2
    brummyfan2 ACE Posts: 28,104 Trailblazer
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    Hi,
    No problem, yes Throttlestop is a very good program and it will reduce the temps, I haven't used it recently but if you post in the thread any questions you want to ask, they will clear your concerns, as for the higher temps damaging the components, no, I don't think so.
  • TomatoCatchUP
    TomatoCatchUP Member Posts: 3 New User
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    Hi,
    Your temps(77-84 C) in normal operation looks fine, you could reduce the Maximum Processor State to 50-60% in Advanced Power Options settings and see whether it reduces the temps.
    I would suggest you to use Throttlestop to undervolt your CPU to control the temps, you won't see any reduced performance by undervolting and it's safe, complete instructions are in the link below.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K1srWgovdn8
    http://forum.notebookreview.com/threads/the-throttlestop-guide.531329/


    Brummyfan2 basically got it, the magic should be totally done by:

    a) Set the Max Processor State to 99%

    b) Use of Intel XTU program (https://downloadcenter.intel.com/download/24075/Intel-Extreme-Tuning-Utility-Intel-XTU-) and lowering the CORE VOLTAGE OFFSET by e.g. -0.050V. {if you do not know whats the rest options for - don't play with them :) }

    I did used both options - where with a 99.9% after solid testing and 5 full clean reinstalls the Set MAX CPU state to 99% does the trick. Further, by the Intel XTU I did play more with the thermal question where I do not like the CPU in idle to hit 50C.

    to wrap up, both options enabled SetMAXCPU 99% and CORE VOLTAGE OFFSET -0.075V got me idle CPU temps (browsing, youtube, office apps) down to some 41C in AVG.

    For gaming guys I totally recommend a cooling pad (e.g. Zalman ZM-NC3). Nitro V15 both the 960m and 1050Ti/1060 editions are able to get cooler when gaming for good 7-12C depending the room ambient temperature. Solidly tested.. 

    keep CooL live longer :)