Brand new ASUS ROG 95*C+ in BF4

Raptor05121

Estimable
Feb 26, 2014
5
0
4,510
This is my first laptop, ASUS ROG JL551-JK running the i7-4710HQ @ 3.5GHz and GTX850M DDR3 and I get great performance (60FPS) in BF4, but after I close it, RealTemp recorded an all-time temp of 96*C across all 4 cores, with TJMax set to "LOG" (which I've only seen once when I overclocked my Haswell desktop too hot). It sits square on a nice hard surface, in a freezing-cold air-conditioned room here at work. I understand laptops are used to higher heat than desktops, but should I be worried running ~95*C for hours on end in BF4?

I should've spent the extra money and getting the 771 with 17" with dual fans (this model only has one )
 
Solution
There are a few things I would check, ensure the fan is spinning for starters, at those temps the fan should be kicked up to 100%. Does the fan (assuming its spinning) kick out a good deal of hot air? If so, they make aftermarket laptop 'pads' that are basically a surface with 1 or more fans (usb powered) that you sit your laptop on. I've had great success using these to cool an older laptop that had poor fan design, and was throttling because of it, it decreased temperatures substantially (30f if I recall correctly). From the sounds of it the laptop sounds new, so dust accumulation between the fan and the heatsync fins is not the problem.

You may (or may not) be able to check the BIOS for alternative fan settings, perhaps the fan...

BrandonYoung

Estimable
Oct 13, 2014
43
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4,610
There are a few things I would check, ensure the fan is spinning for starters, at those temps the fan should be kicked up to 100%. Does the fan (assuming its spinning) kick out a good deal of hot air? If so, they make aftermarket laptop 'pads' that are basically a surface with 1 or more fans (usb powered) that you sit your laptop on. I've had great success using these to cool an older laptop that had poor fan design, and was throttling because of it, it decreased temperatures substantially (30f if I recall correctly). From the sounds of it the laptop sounds new, so dust accumulation between the fan and the heatsync fins is not the problem.

You may (or may not) be able to check the BIOS for alternative fan settings, perhaps the fan will only kick up to full when its plugged into AC (worth investigation). Or perhaps the BIOS has a setting combination of low fan speed + throttle cpu speed (sometimes refered to as eco mode cooling, or passive+active cooling). If so this could be modified to "Max performance" at the cost of battery life.

Windows itself may be partially to blame, you could investigate "Power Options" (control panel -> power options) then edit the existing profile(s) depending on your use (battery vs AC). Click on "changae advanced power settings"
Expand "Processor power management" and check the system cooling policy.
Active increases fan speed before reducing CPU speed, where passive does the opposite. (I would suggest Active here). I'm on my desktop currently, so I can't see any laptop specific power options if they exist, I think they would. But this should be fairly self explanatory. You want max fanspeed where ever possible. Again, assuming the fan is not broken or something.

I would be somewhat concerned about those temperatures if you want to get a long life from your laptop. Heat degrades silicon sadly. Constant high temperatures could be the ultimate short comming of your laptops life.

Good luck!
 
Solution

Raptor05121

Estimable
Feb 26, 2014
5
0
4,510


Thanks for the reply. Fan is spinning. I only play with AC plugged in and set to high performance mode. I also checked the cooling settings like you advised and it is set to active. My next step is to check the BIOS. I appreciate the responses. I didn't think those cooling pads did much of a benefit, but 15*C is a difference so I'll look into it. Thanks!