ASUS ROG G750JM temp

LJ Rosales

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Jul 23, 2014
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im using sketchup 2014 and vray 2.0 . while rendering, my cpu and motherboard temp reached 95c with cooling pad. my friend has alienware 17 and it only reaches 80c with cooling pad. is there any problem with my laptop? asus rog g750jm.
 
Solution
Those core temps are definitely too hot even at 100% load which is what you have. Apparently there are no settings for the fan in the BIOS although I'd double check this. You should probably go into control panel and power options and navigate to the advanced power options.

Open the processor power management category and check the following three items.

Minimum processor state. Make sure both on battery and plugged in are set to 5%.

System cooling policy. Make sure this is set to passive.(Reductions in core settings affect core temperatures far more quickly than fan speed ever will.).

Maximum processor state. Set both settings to 99%. This will stop the cpu from being used in Turbo mode. You can change this back later depending...
What are you using to monitor the temps? What temp are you looking at, there are several cpu temperatures and some of them are not accurate and should be ignored. You want to look at cpu0 or individual cpu core temps. The cpu socket temp tends to run much higher on average and although high readings are not desireable it seems that on laptops, and on AMD units in particular, many of these temps are misleading.

Can you tell me what you are using to monitor the temps, I'd recommend something like HWinfo, http://www.hwinfo.com/download.php. See if you can post a screenshot of the high temps by following these steps: http://www.tomshardware.com/answers/id-2173703/post-images-tomshardware-guide.html
 

LJ Rosales

Reputable
Jul 23, 2014
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4,530
asdssssss.png


this is my temp when rendering on sketchup + vray
 

Yeah, I asked that already. I even gave instructions on how to do it. Not going to ask again. It's hard to help people when they won't help themselves.
 
Those core temps are definitely too hot even at 100% load which is what you have. Apparently there are no settings for the fan in the BIOS although I'd double check this. You should probably go into control panel and power options and navigate to the advanced power options.

Open the processor power management category and check the following three items.

Minimum processor state. Make sure both on battery and plugged in are set to 5%.

System cooling policy. Make sure this is set to passive.(Reductions in core settings affect core temperatures far more quickly than fan speed ever will.).

Maximum processor state. Set both settings to 99%. This will stop the cpu from being used in Turbo mode. You can change this back later depending on what happens with the temps.

Reboot and see if there is any improvement.
 
Solution

abhisekzok

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Jan 13, 2012
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18,710
Yep the temps are really hot, even at ideal temp. Do what darkbreeze says and if those thing does not work, you may need to clean the inside of the lappy and replace thermal compound. And switch off the hyperthreading if it helps.
 
You know, I don't know. I did a double check with MY HP Envy m6 and in AMD Overdrive while it's showing 26c to thermal limit, meaning it's 26c below what we feel is max safe temp, but at the same time my HWinfo is showing 96c on CPU0 package which we believe is too high in almost all cases.

At the same time my core temp is showing around 50c. So maybe it's designed that way. I dunno. I sure as f@#$ wish they would design a clear cut temp standard that all processors, hardware, monitoring devices and sensors could adhere to. Something simple that specifically determines, hey, stay below temp x, and all reporting hardware actually reports the same temp specification as the one used to gauge temp x.

Just stay below this spec and you're good, go over it and it's bad. Like Camp Chaos Napster bad. Fire bad, Fire baaaaaddddddddd!!! Cooler goooooooooooooddddd! Anyhow. Got carried away for a minute there.

So, none of this cpu0, cpu core, cpu socket, cpu package, thermal limit differential, Tcase, Tjunction, Intel temp vs AMD temp, these temp sensors don't read right, those temp sensors need to add this and subtract that. Why is it so incomprehensible to the engineers to establish ONE temp specification across the board for processors and determine what that thermal limit is for each cpu line and stick it in the manual and call it a day.

Whew. I'm done.
 

abhisekzok

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Jan 13, 2012
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this generally happens in the case of lappy i suppose, but my pc gives accurate readings like my avg temp is 60 and my gaming temp is around 80 which is high since i overclocked it. Well if u cant do anything about the lappy(replacing the thermal compund etc) might as well stick with the current temp and try to keep it below the max temp or u could set the max temp to cut off the cpu in the bios so that the cpu does not fry up and hence destroying the whole lappy. U can also give it to a store to doublecheck the that there is no dust or something on the heatsink if u cant do it manually(i had a problem like this). For now do the bios thing.
 
His BIOS doesn't have any settings to control temp that I saw. He can however go into the power control options like I said before and set the max power settings to 99% and the min power settings to 5%. That will stop turbo core from kicking in and should keep the temps down. Performance will of course take a little bit of a hit though.