If yes how?
PS: Speedfan doesn't work.
Don't know how much you know, but normally that should be possible in the bios.
Laptops mostly have a very trimmed bios. I haven't seen fan control in a laptop's BIOS yet.
Have to say that I've always been a fan of a normal PC. But a bios flash could also be possible, right?
For a notebook, ventilation is very important, in my opinion, bringing it down doesn't help. If the fan is permanently audible even in the normal desktop without computing load, it will probably have to be cleaned.
I think the notebook manufacturers hardly offer any new features. In newer BIOS versions, changelogs can be read, such as improved fan control. But this does not help if the cooling fin has become clogged. However, you can't adjust anything manually on the fans.
Okay good to know.
I want the opposite to prevent overclocking for some more intensive tasks.
Yes, the bios can be forgotten😂
Probably. Should you try to clean the fans? And unfortunately, as far as I know, the cooling system of laptops is also not designed for the CPU to run at full load all the time, most of them regulate in the long run.
If a computing load overwhelms the notebook or its cooling, the CPU clocks down. With 100% CPU usage, the fan regulates accordingly. Clocking down is a protective measure of the CPU against heat death. The fan simply can't do it anymore. More speed is then no longer possible. My tip again → Disassemble, clean, replace thermal compound, assemble and test. A notebook stand can also help.
At 100%, the temperature stays roughly permanently at 55 degrees, which is still a long way from heat death, isn't it? Can you somehow set the temperature from which the clock is clocked down?
55 degrees is actually nothing. I know enough notebooks that are not yet around 90 degrees. Perhaps the manufacturer can help you in this case. You can make a support request.
55 degrees is actually nothing
The fan is not running at 100%, so more should go.