So I have an Acer Aspire VX15 I7 7700HQ, GTX 1050Ti 4Gb, 8Gb Ram
Right this is a notebook. Now we come to my question. So on the desktop I have a maximum clock of 3.60-3.70Ghz. Only with programs for video cut or Blender for 3D things and also in games in which the Cpu already at the start down clocks on 3.39Ghz or sometimes down to 2.8Ghz. The clock then remains constant on it. I'm wondering that it was not so at the time and at the temperature can't be because then the clock would have to reduce only in the game and when starting the game, the temperature is only 40bis50Grad.
Have not found anything on the net I hope you can help me.
Ps: In bios, I can't do anything Only boot and date settings go to the calculator.
Then you have to see how high your CPU clocks when all cores are working. There's no CPU that clocks the same amount of boost on all cores. It is possible to set with OC, but that also means that the CPU needs more power and generates more waste heat.
But before you look stupid, because you have no idea what to look for: https://en.wikichip.org/wiki/intel/core_i7/i7-7700hq
3,800 MHz (1 core),
3,600 MHz (2 cores),
3,400 MHz (3 cores),
3,400 MHz (4 cores)
If 4 cores are busy, the CPU only clocks at 3.4Ghz, and if the temp is too high or the CPU is consuming too much power, it will clock even lower.
Because the CPU is at full capacity and the temperature can rise very high within seconds. The fans may not lag behind, maybe you need a better thermal grease, or you have set the fan noise (for example, on "quiet" → if you need less cooling, the CPU should clock down earlier)
Because it is Intel. They advertise with high clock rates, but due to the consumption and the cooling can be met only with little load.
Is just funny that it was not so before and I have nothing to coolers set
Ok just I have no idea why that used to be different.
I can only tell you what the processor has for a performance. And in desktop mode, this clocks higher, since usually only 1 core is used.