I know I've asked this question before and asked it in a similar way before, but I wanted to get more opinions.
All games were on my gaming notebook for 20 seconds after a time and then it runs smoothly again. After a while they lie again.
Games: Gta5, Minecraft, Watch Dogs 1 and 2, ACO, ACU,
Device: Acer Predator Helios 300, Windows 10, Gtx 1060, 16GB RAM, Intel Core i7.
I already have: Windows 10 reinstalled, games reinstalled, updated graphics driver.
Maybe he's running too hot If my pc was the same, if it was on for a long time and I then want to play Battlefield 5, then it lags now and then.
OR: steam updates something in the background while I play, which completely destroys the gaming experience.
As was said correctly here, your device is likely to reduce CPU performance due to the heat. This fluctuates with the cooling and accordingly your performance is not constant. I do not suspect a defect in the hardware, then the problems would be permanent. If the device can perform perfectly at times, then nothing is broken; software intervenes here.
Check energy options, set maximum power and stay connected. I would create a new energy saving plan with the system cooling policy set to "active".
It is running very warm.
80-90 degrees
There's nothing in the background.
Is already at peak performance and in operation on the network.
Hardware fails digitally. So there's only the condition working or broken. Therefore, a defect is unlikely at first. So check out how the vital data of your hardware is while gaming. What is the temperature and how is the load on the individual components?
80-90 degrees
Could be likely that the voltage converter or the chipset is running too hot. I also had the phenomenon before. The processor then briefly lowers the clock rate.
And how high is the CPU and graphics card clocking at that moment? Because that sounds a lot like a thermal problem.
What does the energy saving plan look like? Some devices let you switch the cooling from passive to active and even determine the performance status of the CPU; here you could permanently set 100%.
Do you mean the% specification for the task manager?
Always 80% with CPU and graphics card
The question was about the timing ^^. So how much MHz is your hardware running at that moment?
I always set the cooling to maximum during gaming, manually. Still brings nothing.
Unfortunately I do not know it.
Maybe jack up somehow that he is better ventilated. 90 degrees in the long run is not healthy
Then install a tool like the MSI Afterburner. There you get the answers.
Start a benchmark like MSI Kombustor and start the CPU burner and download CoreTemp and check the clock rates during the stress test.
What should a gaming laptop be?
I'm now assuming one without "gaming".
You have a great system. If it jerky, something else steals the speed of the CPU.
Something is going on in the background.
The games themselves are not.
Have you ever asked Acer customer service?
You are talking about 90 degrees elsewhere, that would be too hot. A huge heat sink can be 90 degrees in an air-flowed tower; if such temperatures are somewhere in your thin notebook case, there's a technical problem. Google times "Acer Helios 300 heat" - I could immediately find some reports about immense heat on this device.
Are you constantly doing the toughest benchmarks or video rendering? Are the fans dusty beyond recognition? If not, this is a problem in the device from the start. Contact customer service.