Forum Replies Created
-
AuthorPosts
-
August 28, 2018 at 6:46 pm #145883
Hi, Thank you for the info, could you please post some pics of the BIOS as I am very interested in this mod. In the video you mentioned is not very clear as he uses TDP boot mode up instead of nominal which is the default for our laptop. Thank you
I will take some photos soon and explain everything I changed inside my BIOS.
I’m running the XTU stress test which is probably multi thread app. BTW I have undervolted the CPU by -0.050V in the BIOS not sure if i can go any lower. Any advice on this? Thank you
XTU stress test is multi thread, yes. Open XTU and start a stress test for 5 minutes. If your system stays stable, go down another 10mV and so on. The lowest i can go is -70mV for both CPU and GPU but your results may vary.
August 28, 2018 at 7:13 am #145865Thanks for your help . Can you just tel me where you do this in your bios ? I really try find it but I dont know where you change it…
Watch this video to find out more about the BIOS: https://youtu.be/tO-p2sCaXck
The BIOS is the same as from the GPD Win 2.
August 27, 2018 at 8:11 pm #145857Hello everyone.
I wanted to share my own experiences with my thermal mod. I have replaced the cheap 1 mm thermal pad with a 15x15x1 mm copper plate in combination with MX4 thermal paste and the temperatures have dropped by 15°c while gaming. The laptop is also way cooler to the touch at the bottom of the notebook (which is NOT made out of plastic by the way) and on the left side of the keyboard. I don’t recommend using any kind of thermal pads because they transfer heat way worse than copper. I also HIGHLY recommend everyone to tweak the voltages of their CPU and the GPU inside the BIOS, because this will increase lifetime, reduce quite a lot of heat generation and save power.
Also, adding a copper sheet in combination with a thermal pad on top the copper heatplate will hardly do anything for your cooling. There isn’t much that you can do except for the copper plate between the SoC and the copper heatplate. Correct BIOS settings are also VERY important. Teclast has set a max TDP of 15 watts, which is way too high. Set it to 10 watts inside your BIOS if you want max performance. You won’t notice any difference in performance and your SoC will run cooler. Default normal TDP of 7 watts is fine. I have set my TDP to 4.5 watts (normal and max) and Skyrim runs at around 38 fps with everything set to low except textures (medium), anisotropic filtering (8x) and viewing distance (medium) on 1280×720 and the SoC doesn’t go above 50°c. 4.5 watts is also perfectly fine for desktop use because the CPU is still able to clock at 2,6GHz and it saves a lot of battery life.
-
AuthorPosts

