Quote from: Gump on June 13, 2020, 18:15:12Took a look and it does seem there is similar behavior on the HP Envy, although the throttling its doing is a lot more appropriate. What Lenovo is doing in this situation is pulling the power limit down to basically nothing for a few moments in some desperate attempt to cool the system down, then releasing the power limit back to 35-38w. It's bizzare. Also-- yeah, I'd love to see more smt-enabled laptops.
I can report the same behaviour on battery with a HP Envy 13 x360 and the R7 4700U.
From what I've seen on reddit and the difference of performance between other manufacturers using Renoir chips, Lenovo is using a 35 max sustained power draw for the its low consumption Renoir... (25 W on HP and Acer)
You can find my results on reddit "HP Envy x360 13 R7 4700U 16Go RAM | Power mode explored (Cinebench 20 + monitoring T°, W, GHz)"
A shame there is not too much 4600U out there because I think it might be an interesting chip if well priced vs the R7.
Quote from: dasdjasdjasl on June 13, 2020, 12:31:54
Now on a serious note, you know that there are also laptops with 1065G7 that cost ~700$, right? Same quality, maybe even better and performance of 4500U seems to be in the same ballpark as 1065G7. So this laptop is not the "killer" you portray it to be.