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Posted by Lakshay Kakkar
 - November 12, 2019, 04:59:57
I think the Scar III in the review is power limit throttling. But when its power limit is raised using throttlestop, it will run as good as the MSI I believe. Although I have the i7 version, before unlocking the power limits it was limited to 60 watts and struggled to keep clocks high. But after raising the limit to 100 Watts it was used as high as 80-85 Watts during Cinebench and still remained below 90 degrees. Whereas I see MSI struggle at a mere 60 Watts at 90 degrees - Asus should smoke the MSI easily.
Posted by Alexandr
 - July 16, 2019, 08:39:27
Quote from: trespot on July 15, 2019, 22:22:52
So how do you explain the fact that Asus Strix Scar III G531GW is also behind the MSI P65 Creator 9SF-657 which is 15,6 inch and has a much smaller footprint.

And this is the correct discussion.
That's right, MSI has a 10% advantage.

My claim is to the author, who writes in the title that the difference is 25%. But you amd me see that this is not true and he compares "different things".
I just do not like "loud phrases" and such "marketing". I am for impartiality  ;)
Posted by trespot
 - July 15, 2019, 22:22:52
Quote from: Alexandr on July 15, 2019, 17:40:37
Quote from: Douglas Black on July 15, 2019, 16:42:26
performance should be judged based on their hardware, not chassis.
The larger form factor, the more can be equipped with a laptop: it's the motherboard and cooling system. The latter can significantly affect the throttling, and therefore the overall performance under high loads.

So how do you explain the fact that Asus Strix Scar III G531GW is also behind the MSI P65 Creator 9SF-657 which is 15,6 inch and has a much smaller footprint.


Posted by Alexandr
 - July 15, 2019, 17:40:37
Quote from: Douglas Black on July 15, 2019, 16:42:26
performance should be judged based on their hardware, not chassis.
The larger form factor, the more can be equipped with a laptop: it's the motherboard and cooling system. The latter can significantly affect the throttling, and therefore the overall performance under high loads.
Posted by Douglas Black
 - July 15, 2019, 16:42:26
@Alexandr,

I believe laptop's performance should be judged based on their hardware, not chassis. If you want to measure a chassis, do so with units of length and weight.
Posted by S.Yu
 - July 15, 2019, 12:01:33
Quote from: Alexandr on July 15, 2019, 11:18:03
And the fact that laptops of different form factors do not bother the author?
This is primarily an indicator of the difference in performance of 17" vs 15.6".
lol, the 17" Blade is only 10% faster than the 15" with the same specs, by most measures.
Posted by Alexandr
 - July 15, 2019, 11:18:03
And the fact that laptops of different form factors do not bother the author?
This is primarily an indicator of the difference in performance of 17" vs 15.6".
Posted by Redaktion
 - July 15, 2019, 06:20:12
If you're in the market for a Core i9 laptop, you may want to skip the Asus Strix Scar III G531GW for the larger MSI GE75 9SG in order to get the most of what the Core i9-9880H can offer. The same CPU in the MSI is able to maintain faster clock rates for longer for a not insignificant performance advantage.

https://www.notebookcheck.net/MSI-laptop-with-Core-i9-9880H-outperforms-Asus-laptop-with-the-exact-same-processor-by-25-percent.427635.0.html