![]() I have been a Mac owner my whole life (though I felt comfortable with windows), and last year I needed to purchase a laptop that was capable of multi-dimensional multi-physical modeling and thought that I knew how changing those power plan settings would impact the computer. If you're reading this and thinking that this guy is an idiot for what he did and he deserves whatever damage came to his computer, I'm inclined to agree.At any point, I am willing to invest in a thermal paste, or having someone do that.Can the CPU be replaced if damaged? If so, will the new CPU cause my hardware address to change? I use an individually licensed software and am concerned I will need to pay for a new license.Can any damage be assessed digitally or must it be done under sterile conditions?.If the computer never "Down-clocked" itself at these temperatures for extended periods of intense computation, has damage been done to the cores? Would the computer be able to override a custom power plan (seems like it didnt)?.What power plan settings would you recommend (in their entirety) for maximizing the performance and safety of the CPU cores?.What, if not the minimum processor state, could be causing this incompatibility between system settings and dragon center?.Has anyone else experienced this before?.I have not bothered to trouble shoot which of my power plan settings caused this problem, but I am suspecting the minimum processor state was the culprit. How to Fix (quick and dirty): Restore the 'Recommended' power plan to your computers power settings and temperatures do not exceed 85C, even when operating under the Tubo settings in Dragon Center. The temperature of at least 1 core will reach or exceed 90C in all of these settings. Go back to the System Tuner tab and set Shift to Comfort, Sport, or Turbo mode. Click back to the "System Monitor" tab of Dragon Center and click on the 'Details' under CPU for quick temp estimate (mine says 72C with no other apps open). Once the plan is active, open Dragon Center and ensure your "System Tuner" tab settings have 'Shift' set to Eco and 'Fan Speed' set to Cooler Boost. This is well above the safe operating temperature for continued and lasting performance from a CPU.Ĭonditions that create the problem: Creating your own power plan, specifically one that incorporates changes to "Processor Power Management" (Potentially setting the minimum processor state above 80% caused this issues) and/or maximizes all other power outputs to internal hardware for performance improvements. ![]()
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