Laptop Core i9-10980HK CPU has a power allowance of 135 Watts
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ObscureangelPT
That CPU will never get to it's 5.3 GHZ for more than 10 seconds.
I have a DELL LATITUDE 5590 with a mere i7 8650u, a CPU targeted to 15w (at stock speeds) 2.1GHZ, but with turbo boost enabled, it can go up to 4.1GHZ (4c/8t).
I have seen HWMonitor reporting >50W with turbo boost enabled.
While working with it, like compiling stuff or just doing some work, the turbo was fine, the CPU was ramping up it's frequencies, and while It could easily ramping up the fans to very loud noise and temps to 90c, it felt good performance wise, comparing to the silent 2.1GHZ and 60c operation.
Altough, while gaming, it is a disaster. After 1 minute of gaming, the CPU was getting to 100c having massive thermal throotling, dropping frequencies from 3.4GHZ and 4.1GHZ, at each 10 seconds to 900MHZ, performance drops from 80FPS in games to 20FPS each 10 seconds.
Disabling turbo boost and operating at 2.1 GHZ did grant me smooth operation at 70c and not performance drops and same performance in most GPU Bound games (which is easy for a Nvidia MX130).
I can't even imagine how the hell this guys are going to handle a 135w CPU on a laptop.
This is absolutelly ridiculous.
I still have an old laptop with a i5-4200u a (2c/4t) CPU with turbo up to 2.1GHZ, and I've never seen it go above 15w, and it gets locked 2.1GHZ all the time without dropping and with respectable temps.
Intel seems that have gone full retarted where in laptops, heat and noise and efficiency don't matter anymore where it is most important!
Almost feels like the old AMD FX CPUs or the AMD R9 290 -.-
Ridiculous, I end up disabling the turbo of the i7 8650u since it's useless, unless you have probably a very blocky and big laptop!
Alessio1989
They look like more desktop CPUs than for laptops..
bobblunderton
Mesab67
Kaarme
xIcarus