Swift 3 - Again facing thermal throttling, how can i speed up the fan?

MigelAntonio
MigelAntonio Member Posts: 21 Networker
edited November 2023 in 2020 Archives
Hi, i am again facing to thermal throttling with my Swift 3... Throttling is starting exactly at 80c and even with strong undervolting i get very often while playing a bit over 80, but only a little bit, mostly 82-85... Playing with this laptop is just impossible because such a *****.

But, my ventilator is all the time even on over 80c running kinda slow. Why? I wanna get much bigger air flow and let it turn fully.

Acer ist just joking with me in this way... My brother has Asus laptop which is much older and with much worse components and his intel cpu is running hell good many years gaming daily houres after houres on 80-100c normally and with much better gaming performance with much worse components then me.. I have enough now, just if this is the way Acer want to block everything to be not modified, i will never buy any ***** of them anymore. Everything i tryied on mine seems to be technically blocked that you can't do much with that issue. So, when not possible to turn off throttling security on your own risk, how can i control fan speed? Fanspeed is not detecting any fans, as well as HWinfo64...

 And please do not tell me that even THAT is blocked by Acer to do not let you change anything..

Thank for help 

Answers

  • MigelAntonio
    MigelAntonio Member Posts: 21 Networker
    Allright, i tried NoteBook FanControl which seem to controll fan speed pretty well, no Acer config worked for me so i used settings file from Xiaomi Mi Book and its working, i can let the fan spin really fast now. Temperature while playing on high settings and full hd still stands around 80 including cpu undervolting but for example GTA5 is not lagging anymore now (or at least most of the playing time and it's barely noticeable). I am about to try that for a longer period to see if its really working, maybe i will try to get even higher undervoling or reduce some small settings on gpu). If i will have a success with temperature decrease i will inform about that
  • GAMING6698
    GAMING6698 ACE Posts: 7,785 Pathfinder
    @MigelAntonio
    Outdated gpu driver and bios version cause overheating.

    Make sure you are using latest nvidia/amd software 
    windows 10/11 optimization guide for gaming 
    Windows 10/11 optimization guide for gaming — Acer Community

    My AN515-43 laptop UserBenchmark-
    https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/51514566
  • MigelAntonio
    MigelAntonio Member Posts: 21 Networker
    edited May 2020
    @MigelAntonio
    Outdated gpu driver and bios version cause overheating.

    Make sure you are using latest nvidia/amd software  with 

    Hi, i did update of my Bios, BUT the result is that i cannot boot my laptop anymore with RTS with Optane option. My pc was still repeating restart and starting troubleshoting. I could boot only with Ahci.. What can i do with that? That it is working like before
  • MigelAntonio
    MigelAntonio Member Posts: 21 Networker
    @MigelAntonio
    Outdated gpu driver and bios version cause overheating.

    Make sure you are using latest nvidia/amd software  with 

    Hi, i did update of my Bios, BUT the result is that i cannot boot my laptop anymore with RTS with Optane option. My pc was still repeating restart and starting troubleshoting. I could boot only with Ahci.. What can i do with that? That it is working like before

    Oh it was probably already before set on Ahci, and the bios update did it set default into RTS Optane and therefore it could not boot up anymore... Could it be so? I though it was already before working in Optane mode... I probably don't have Intel optane discs inside... Actually never heard of them until this update. In the device manager there is nothing named like that, i think they should have to have optane in the name or not?

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,246 Trailblazer
    Intel Optane memory is a small fast SSD that's plugged into the M.2 slot on systems that boot from a HDD in order to speed up access to the HDD via a caching scheme. If you have an M.2 SSD you don't have Optane memory, since they both go in the same slot. Your Toshiba is a 1TB HDD running at 5400 RPM and will be slow, but holds a bunch of data. Your Western Digital is an NVMe SSD and is in that M.2 slot. You are booting from the SSD and the C: drive is there as well, so things should be nice and fast. Switch the BIOS out of Optane mode and it should start booting from the SSD again.
    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.