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- HP Community
- Gaming
- Gaming Notebooks
- Power throttle CPU i7-9750H

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08-21-2019 07:28 AM
Hi,
I have been getting CPU power throttling, I don't get thermal throttling or anything like that. Can see this when I run the cpu test through xtu. Has anyone got a fix? Only had this 3 days and can be a bit annoying.
08-23-2019 08:39 AM
Welcome to the HP Support Community!
Are you facing any issues when running any game or application?
Meanwhile, I recommend you update the BIOS and the graphics driver from the below link and check if it helps.
https://support.hp.com/in-en/drivers
Follow the steps in the below article to update the BIOS.
https://support.hp.com/in-en/document/c00042629
Let me know how it goes and you have a great day!
If you wish to show appreciation for my efforts, mark my post as Accept as Solution. Your feedback counts!
Cheers!
The_Fossette
I am an HP Employee
08-23-2019 01:32 PM
HI The_Fossette,
I have just installed the new BIOS(AMI F.12, 10/06/2019), I then run the CPU stress test(XTU) after about 45 seconds it starts to show the power throttle issue, then the CPU slows down the clock down. I only ever get the CPU Power throttle, temps etc only hit about 65-78oc. Is there anything else you can recommend? Apart from this issue the laptop runs as it should.
Thanks
Thomas.
08-24-2019 03:17 AM
I recommend you contact support to further diagnose the issue.
Here is how you can get in touch with support.
1)Click on this link – www.hp.com/contacthp/
2)Select the product type.
3)Enter the serial number of your device or select let HP detect your product option.
4)Select the country from the drop-down.
5)You should see the HP phone support number or Chat option listed.
Cheers!
The_Fossette
I am an HP Employee
08-25-2019 02:48 PM - edited 08-25-2019 02:50 PM
The power throttle happens because the i7-9750h is designed to sustain 45w long term. If you have turbo boost active, watts will go up to 60w for a short period of time, after that, it will throttle down to 45w. You can see this actually in Intel XTU.
Temperatures do not matter in this case, since the CPU is designed to power throttle irrespective of the temperatures.
Now, there are two things to consider with Omen:
1. You can actually change the power levels, i.e. you can increase the maximum watts levels via XTU or Throttlestop. Unfortunately, Omen has locked those values so you won't be able to change them unless there is a BIOS update to support this.
2. Omen has actually set the long term thermal design power from 45w to 35w, which is below what Intel recommends. This is what happened in your case as well, as you can see that you get a maximum of 35w in XTU. Again, as long as there is no BIOS update, you won't be able to change that as well.
08-25-2019 02:54 PM
Hi,
Thanks for the response, yeah I sent the pic to show HP what was happening. I did update the bios but unfortunately this didn't change anything. It starts to throttle after about 45 seconds. It's just a bit annoying to have it do it and then effect games. I've had about 4/5 gaming laptops over the years and this is the first time it's started to happen to me. Don't know what to do about it now(nothing I can do anyway).
Thanks
08-25-2019 02:58 PM
They won't do anything, since this is the way the laptops were designed. You can download HWInfo and you will see under "configurable TDP (down)" that HP set the long term power limit to 35w. Nothing you can do about it, it's locked.
It's really strange for a gaming notebook manufacturer to go below what Intel recommends (maybe because of the poor cooling solution, who knows?), but Omen did it and all we can do is to wait for a BIOS update or accept it or return it.
08-25-2019 03:06 PM
Yeah it's strange, dnt understand why this would do this really. If that's the way they want to do it then why put that cpu inside?. Why not change for a less powerful one that you wouldn't need to do this. Then you could I don't know increase the cooling on a more demanding machine.
Might return it then, not sure what one I would get now . Would need to do a bit of research on laptops that don't lock the TDP, or that just have a higher overall base.
Thanks