CPU not boosting while gaming aspire 7 with i5 9300h

sadasdasd
sadasdasd Member Posts: 6

Tinkerer

edited November 2022 in Aspire Laptops
i have acer aspire 7 with i5 9300h the cpu is not boosting while gaming plugging it dose not help it is already on highperformance other wise it reaches 3.5 and above while doing other stuff but not while gaming. please help

{Thread was edited to add model name to the title}

Answers

  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 44,871 Trailblazer
    Check advanced power plan settings to see if you have a processor power mgt folder. This folder has been removed in some Win10 versions.  Experiment with changing the default settings in both minimum and maximum processor state. Some users have reported 80-90% max processor states fix some of these issues.


    Jack E/NJ

  • AayushGoel1230
    AayushGoel1230 Member Posts: 19 Troubleshooter
    @sadasdasd bro did you solve your problem?I am facing the same issue (exactly same) here
  • sadasdasd
    sadasdasd Member Posts: 6

    Tinkerer

    @AayushGoel1230 Bro I am still suffereing .Even went to their service and they just changed my MB but it did not change nottin.Please tell me if you solved it

  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 44,871 Trailblazer

    If you tried the earlier suggestion without success, then you might not be preparing the machine before gaming. The battery must be 100% charged and plugged in BEFORE you start heavy gaming loads for maximum play time. Under heavy loads, battery still drains even though plugged in. Once battery drains to about 50%, battery charging takes precedent over game loads. Performance drops and throttling starts. Time to stop gaming and allow batter y to charge back up to 100%. Then you can start gaming again.

    Jack E/NJ

  • JackE
    JackE ACE Posts: 44,871 Trailblazer

    Sounds like it's overheating from the GPU/CPU thermal module not being recently cleaned & re-pasted. This should be considered normal maintenance if the machine is heavily gamed and the first signs of excessive throttling starts to appear. If throttling continues too often, you risk frying the processors.

    Jack E/NJ