Quote from: Oliver Rodwell on June 08, 2019, 15:18:57Probably. For example shower water rarely exceeds 40°C, hot springs are also generally maintained at 39°C, some go as high as 45 but the one I experienced felt "burning" and it took almost half an hour before I could get used to the temperature and dip my entire body in. Personally I'd go for the 2070MQ because lower temperature may mean better longevity and stability.
Just bought the 2060 model - the GPU/CPU temps are fine but the laptop itself is toasty to touch - the article reads 49 but it was burning my finger to touch, is that what 49 feels like?
Quote from: Slish on February 11, 2019, 16:51:24Quote from: Allen.Ngo on February 11, 2019, 03:11:12
@Fruper:
That is actually a great question about the glowing green logo on the outer lid. The ability to turn it on and off would be useful in professional settings. Unfortunately, there is no switch to deactivate the light even in the BIOS. Opting for the Mercury White color option would circumvent this issue.
Mercury White is a "limited edition" color and it is not available on all SKUs. Only the RTX 2060 SKU is available in Mercury White for now as Razer has not announced any plans as of this writing to expand the color.
There are no differences between the RTX 2060 and RTX 2070 Max-Q SKUs other than GPU performance. The RTX 2060 is slower than the RTX 2070 Max-Q by about 13 percent in 3DMark Fire Strike.
@gm89uk:
The performance delta between the GTX 1070 Max-Q and RTX 2070 Max-Q increases at higher resolutions when the processing load becomes more GPU bound. When running the Time Spy benchmark at 2k resolution, for example, the RTX 2070 Max-Q is able to outperform the GTX 1070 Max-Q by about 45 percent. This isn't very helpful for SKUs with the 1080p panel, but it's important nonetheless for users who want to output to higher resolution monitors.
@Dalingrin:
We took your suggestion and reran the CineBench loop test on the Razer "Creator" Performance mode that supposedly increases CPU performance. Multi-Thread score settles at 960 points compared to 925 points on our original loop test.
Is there an actual test between the Razer Blade 15 2060 and the Blade 2070 MaxQ? I'm curious to see the performance difference. Because the 2060 is not a MaxQ but the 2070 is! Is there really a 13% difference?
How much better is the 2060 (Laptop) compared to the 2060 MaxQ?
Thanks!
Quote from: Allen.Ngo on February 11, 2019, 03:11:12
@Fruper:
That is actually a great question about the glowing green logo on the outer lid. The ability to turn it on and off would be useful in professional settings. Unfortunately, there is no switch to deactivate the light even in the BIOS. Opting for the Mercury White color option would circumvent this issue.
Mercury White is a "limited edition" color and it is not available on all SKUs. Only the RTX 2060 SKU is available in Mercury White for now as Razer has not announced any plans as of this writing to expand the color.
There are no differences between the RTX 2060 and RTX 2070 Max-Q SKUs other than GPU performance. The RTX 2060 is slower than the RTX 2070 Max-Q by about 13 percent in 3DMark Fire Strike.
@gm89uk:
The performance delta between the GTX 1070 Max-Q and RTX 2070 Max-Q increases at higher resolutions when the processing load becomes more GPU bound. When running the Time Spy benchmark at 2k resolution, for example, the RTX 2070 Max-Q is able to outperform the GTX 1070 Max-Q by about 45 percent. This isn't very helpful for SKUs with the 1080p panel, but it's important nonetheless for users who want to output to higher resolution monitors.
@Dalingrin:
We took your suggestion and reran the CineBench loop test on the Razer "Creator" Performance mode that supposedly increases CPU performance. Multi-Thread score settles at 960 points compared to 925 points on our original loop test.
Quote from: Dalingrin on February 07, 2019, 06:56:06I hear what you are saying but this is not the case here. RTX actualy has 3 modes not Balanced Gaming and Creator where new creator mode is suppose to push CPU more. However in my testing cinebench is almost never above 900 and while on loop it settles around 830.
As I mentioned in the m15 vs Razer Blade comparison article.
The CPU throttling mention in the article is due to the performance mode you are using. Razer ships with a standard and a gaming mode. Standard will not sustain turbo in an effort to keep fan noise to a minimum. Gaming mode will open up the turbo frequencies at the cost of fan noise.