Quote from: Gastredner on February 14, 2024, 21:39:16Long story short: There is no right or wrong. Every user has different preferences, which is why we need granular fan control!
The crux of the problem is that the volume of the Legion cases and the weight of the CO are lower than that of my old Dell G5 5587, and the TDP is sharply higher (real, not declared). My Dell 5587 runs all the time in the maximum performance profile, but does not turn on the coolers for hours at a normal load of up to 35% on average by core. With W10 tuning and undervolting. The processor consumes 47W peak in PL1 and 75W in PL2. When idle, processor consumption drops to 1.7-1.9W.
Do you see something similar in the new series 2022-2023-2024? No! Their consumption has increased monstrously, and the physics of the cases excludes the best temperature conditions under heavy and pulsed loads. This leads to dangerous consequences when turning on coolers at 72-75C. And there is obligatory noise at 50-60C.
Yes, the new models are much faster than my old one - 3-4 times, at least. But we are not comparing the time difference, but a similar class of laptops and we see that the new models, with the consumption cheating from Intel/NVidia, which brought the consumption of laptops to a monstrous 270-300W, instead of the old 120-140, was the reason that Laptop manufacturers simply cannot ensure long-term reliability of the SoC/dGPU power circuit without constant airflow! That's the reason.
My G5 has been running without a single BSOD for 6 years with the coolers turned off almost 99% of the time. They are as pristine as the factory (I haven't opened it for maintenance in 4 years). But the keyboard, which I hardly used, failed (and that's a shame).
In order for modern laptops to become quiet again (or in other words, manufacturers allow you to increase the temperature threshold for turning on coolers), consumption must drop significantly.
But today only Apple makes balanced machines in this regard (and this is more due to the best technical process available only to Apple), rather than being reminiscent of the Dell G5 5587 in terms of balance, with the only difference being that their models are much lighter. It's just that they deliberately supplied performance for the sake of the owner's comfort in terms of noise, and x86 laptop manufacturers didn't care about this key factor, because their audience is crazier and has different goals - games..
Still, those who buy laptops for work and not for games, put the temperature at which the coolers turn on first, along with a high-quality keyboard and screen. Finding such models is not easy, because... manufacturers of "gaming" series care little about the correct balancing of the system, and the cost of the solution most often (mass series) is naturally much less than Apple models - this leads to the second problem - the maximum reduction in the cost of the component base in terms of the power harness of the SoC. Therefore, in order to save money, they lower the threshold for turning on coolers, because... more frequent airflow increases the service life of cheap components. No miracles. Pure physics and the price of the issue.
To choose a well-balanced model, you need to read a lot of forums and reviews and combine everything together in your head.