I got a laptop (new) with 15 watts as standard and have the possibility to overclock to 35W, I worry if this can create my laptop and not overheat or thereby the life is shortened very quickly.
Hardware: Amd Ryzen 5 3500U, Amd Vega 8 (IGP) …
Here is the link from my laptop:
https://geizhals.at/lenovo-ideapad-l340-15api-blizzard-white-81lw006xge-a2112626.html?hloc=at
As a rule, the manufacturers of notebooks are already blocking hardware and software manipulation of the TDP and clock rates of processors and graphics solutions against possible software-level interventions.
This was also already widespread before, where then possibly (if this ever possible) then a hardware hack by means of soldering, e.g. At the clock was necessary.
But then you would have to wait and see if anybody would be successful in practicing such a hack, if you are not looking for leaks and options on the respective hardware components yourself, and you can handle the corresponding microelectronics and software knowledge,
With a laser cut directly in the CPU, the chances are even worse.
Okay, I thought it was legal, because as far as I know some said that you can overclock the watts on the Ryzer Controller, as well as other things
Eg also OC
Do you know eig vllt if my laptop for 25W "okay" is, and not, for example, have more degrees than 85Celsius degrees and thus does not shorten the life?
Or, for example, Ryzen Mobile Master
The 25 watts refer only to the energy and thermal budget of processors. If the manufacturer of a notebook has cracked at the dimensioning of the internal cooling solution of the book, and thus sewn on hard edge, then the device under load can dissipate safely only the heat development to which it was factory-configured at the maximum permissible ambient temperature according to the manual during the operation of the book.
If you wanted a notebook as in this issue at the TDP budget, for example. From 25 to 35 watts "upstep", the cooling should of course first make, so that the hardware does not overheat under load, and not all the nose long in the TDP limit runs.
There's the naming of a so-called base clock by the device manufacturer in conjunction with the permissible operating ambient temperatures.
If the manufacturer says that the book can be easily operated and charged in my pre-configuration @ 15 watt TDP up to 40 degrees outside air temperature, then with a TDP hack of 15 to 25 or even 35 watt under these circumstances under load only at correspondingly lower ambient temperatures to be possible.
Of course, weak cooling performance of the device compared to TDP limit and ambient temperatures then during upstepping also influences the possible clock rates and temperature developments of the device.
Simplistic:
An AMD Ryzen 7 - 1800X could hardly be properly operated with an AMD Boxed cooler for a Ryzen 5 - 3600 (non X) properly under load.
So if the outside temperature does not exceed 40 degrees with 15W, then it will also be ok for the hardware with 25W, okay thanks.
Do you know of any software that generally measures the temperature of hardware as well as the outside temperature of a device? Or is it synonymous with Windows?
For the CPU you can use CPU-Z or Core Temp, for the graphics solution GPU-Z or Nvidia - Inspector. If possible, the CPU should stay under about 70 to 80, and the Geforce below 80 to 90 degrees if possible. ( less is better )