Laptop processor temperature very high. Is that still normal?

Po
- in Asus
3

I bought a new laptop 2 weeks ago. N Asus Vivobook S15 S510UN with i7-8550U processor, 16GB DDR4 Ram and a MX-150 Graka. I'm very happy with the performance itself, but I'm a bit worried about the processor temperatures. This falls partly without that on the one hand sophisticated programs run easily on> 50 °, gladly also up to 60. Of course then the fan is on the puff, how batty, what then ever can be very loud.
My question: Is that simply because of the performance, which was already installed relatively compact, or do I have to worry because the device is something wrong? Have read such a thing that such temperatures are more likely to arise when elaborate calculations are pending (for games, video editing etc).

Ro

For laptops, Intel sets the recommendations for its mobile processors usually much higher than for desktops and therefore allowed a mobile Intel in the mobile range quite under load reach about 85 to 95 degrees without throttling.

Depending on the compactness of the book and the design of the ventilation system, it can be quite annoying depending on the notebook model.

As long as the whole under load but o.g. Temperature range does not exceed, I see there first no problems.

Which power and energy scheme did you currently set for your book for battery and network operation under Windows?

br

The temperatures are right.

They are quite normal.

When playing the CPU temps like to go over 75 ° and the GPU temps are even higher.

Ra

50 - 60 ° C are no problem, it is only starting from ~ 80 ° C. That laptops like to get warm and loud is normal. The cooling is the big problem, with so little space, the heat can't be properly dissipated.