Quote from: GreyFox on July 17, 2017, 12:31:03
In a word, wrong.
The package has a 15W TDP, that's the design point. Turbo Boost is not continuous, the fact that it hits 25W or 30W during peak Turbo Boost is in no way intended to be sustained of it was the design point would be 25W or 30W.
"I've established that a CPU should hold its turbo boost under load or it is considered throttling,"
Where, please quote the Intel engineering reference that establishes this. You can declare anything you want but that doesn't make it a fact.
Quote from: Douglas Black on July 17, 2017, 03:44:10Quote from: Rob Mc on July 16, 2017, 20:02:45
Thank you for your article, and all of your laptop reviews. I find them to be the most comprehensive on the internet.
Question: What is the difference (from a user perspective) between the results of the "stress test' which runs Prime95 and FurMark, and the other throttling test of running Cinebench several times in a row.
For example, on my Dell XPS 13 9360, I have noticed that when stressed, the CPU clock will drop considerably. However, I ran the Cinebench multi-core test for almost 30 minutes, and it always returned with a score of 330...so no drop at all.
That will result in 100% CPU and 100% GPU load. It's an unrealistic scenario but it pushes the system to the absolute limits.
Cinebench is a CPU load, so it's actually less strenuous.Quote from: I agree! on July 16, 2017, 17:56:33
I agree with everything you wrote, time to crack down on throttling laptops that can't sufficiently cool their high end advertised components! Although, I am a bit confused by your article, what are you gonna change in the reviews that you do to highlight the points you made in this article, aren't you already highlighting throttling issues in your articles, how are you gonna make that more apparent?
Since about 6 months ago we started doing the cinebench loop to check for CPU throttling, so this is something we have started watching a bit more closely. It was more focusing on the reviewing community/industry as a whole.
Quote from: Rob Mc on July 16, 2017, 20:02:45
Thank you for your article, and all of your laptop reviews. I find them to be the most comprehensive on the internet.
Question: What is the difference (from a user perspective) between the results of the "stress test' which runs Prime95 and FurMark, and the other throttling test of running Cinebench several times in a row.
For example, on my Dell XPS 13 9360, I have noticed that when stressed, the CPU clock will drop considerably. However, I ran the Cinebench multi-core test for almost 30 minutes, and it always returned with a score of 330...so no drop at all.
Quote from: I agree! on July 16, 2017, 17:56:33
I agree with everything you wrote, time to crack down on throttling laptops that can't sufficiently cool their high end advertised components! Although, I am a bit confused by your article, what are you gonna change in the reviews that you do to highlight the points you made in this article, aren't you already highlighting throttling issues in your articles, how are you gonna make that more apparent?