Mil-hdbk-ijf chg notice 2 = 99014 377 notice of change not measurement this handbook is for guidance only - mil-hdbk-217f do not cite this document as a requirement notice 2 28 february 1995 military handbook reliability prediction of electronic equipment to all holders of mil-hdbk-217f 1.
![]() GPU Temp
GPU Temp is a free GPU temperature monitor that can display GPU core temperature and load, the temperature data will display in the system tray, and will be real-time updated. In addition, you can choose the color for temperature display, also supports start with the Windows system.
(Mirror download) Why you need this free software?
While you play the huge 3D video games or overclock your graphics card, you should worry about graphics card overheating, this small software can actually solve this problem for you. Launch this software, it enables you to keep abreast of the status of graphics when playing game. At the best, it is free to use.
About GPU (graphic processing unit)
The GPU is the abbreviation of 'Graphic Processing Unit', the most critical graphics chip. GPU determines the main performance of one graphics card (v vard), is becoming increasingly important. Today, most graphics cards on the market to use ATI or NVIDIA graphics chip, this software can support both.
FILTER BY: Latest Drivers & Tech Support.General InformationWelcome to! In this subreddit, we discuss and share news, rumors, ideas, and knowledge relating to AMD, their hardware and software products, and the silicon industry.Please note that this subreddit is community run and does not represent AMD unless otherwise specified.
RulesRule 1: Tech support questions are only allowed in and must instead be posted at. Any other tech support posts will be removed at moderator discretion.Rule 2: No referral links, including Amazon! Product links are fine, affiliate or referral links that benefit you are not.Rule 3: Be civil and obey reddiquette, and keep politics/religion to other forums.
Please remember that behind every poster is a human. This means no brigade incitements, personal attacks, or 'mentioning' a user in order to annoy or harass them, etc. Use of slurs of any kind, racial, homophobic, or whatever, in any context will result in a ban.
![]()
This includes derogatory comments such as 'retard'. There's no need for petty insults on this sub.Rule 4: All posts must be related to AMD or AMD products. Example of okay: 'Radeon RX Vega 56 benchmarks!' Or 'Ryzen 5 2600 vs Intel i5-8400'. Videos only mentioning AMD in passing (i.e. 2 minutes out of a 30 minute video) will also be removed.If a linkpost is made with a title only mentioning a competitor a summary comment (a “TLDR” or “TLDW”) will be required explaining how it relates to AMD.
If the post lacks a summary comment, it will be removed.Rule 5: Build pictures/Battlestation posts are only allowed on Weekends (Friday, Saturday, and Sunday).Rule 6 Use original sources. Copypasta articles sourced from other websites are not allowed. Quotes are fine, but pasting the entire article in a textpost is not.
Original articles are always better than a reddit textpost.Rule 7: Shitposts, memes, and plain box pictures are not allowed as linkposts (you can still include them within normal posts or comments). Visit for dank shitposts and memes. Strawpolls are not allowed.Rule 8: The moderators of reserve the right to allow posts or comments that could technically break any of the rules - remember, we're all just volunteers that do our best to cultivate content so that this subreddit can be the best that it can be.
Last edited: Summary:The Ryzen Dell Inspiron 13 7375 2-in-1 I recently purchased is turning out to be quite good so far. I was not really asking about doing videos or using tools to record fps. I was talking about something much more simple- using a single game that already has an inbuilt benchmark, which shows minimum and average fps after you run their inbuilt test. For example, Farcry:Primal, Middle Earth: Shadow of War, and ROTR have such easy to run tests. That is, if you can get access to any one of these games/tests, run that same test at different bios P0R/TDP setting, and report the fps numbers here. Then we could compare the numbers to other RR laptops in the same test.
I experimented extensively with tdp settings in the bios on my 2700u equipped version. The bios setting seems to mainly change the boost clocks. 45w allows 1.3ghz boost on the gpu and 3.8ghz boost on the cpu (basically full bore), 12w limits the gpu to 925-950mhz. Auto sets gpu boost to 1050, which is probably 15w (didn't check it). However, even at 12w setting, the gpu will thermal throttle within a couple of minutes and with the latest drivers, the boost speed will gradually reduce until it can keep itself under 70C (which seems really conservative, but I haven't found any way to adjust that up).
End gpu boost speed is in the 550mhz range on the 2700u to keep it right at 70C, 2500u can probably maintain a little higher than that. Even at the 45w setting, my cpu package is only reporting 11w in HWInfo, that's probably not inclusive of the gpu, but either way this thing can't keep it cool enough to even maintain the 12w tdp boost clocks.Even so, performance is still impressive. I'd have to see some extensive heat-soak testing on the HP envy to see if it's better or worse, but the 2700u should be a little more efficient power wise at full load than the 2500u, but given both will be heat limited in most laptops the difference is probably very small. I'm betting once heat equalized, my 2700u is probably 5% faster than a 2500u equipped 7375 as I assume 10 CU's at slightly lower frequencies will be more efficient than 8 clocked slightly higher. Benchmarks look impressive but that's because they end before these things start heavily throttling, at least on the gpu side (cpu much less affected). Gpu starts throttling after around a minute on 45w tdp setting, 2-3 minutes on 12w tdp setting, depending on game/load.With good cooling this thing would be a monster given the ability to crank it up in the bios. Throttling costs around 40% peformance from what I can tell.
Frame rates drop from mid 50's to mid 30's. I think with better TIM and ability to adjust the throttle to 80C instead of 70C, we can get that loss to 10% or so. Yeah, I put thermal grizzly on and it reduced temps 5C - but temps aren't the problem. I've been able to keep the gpu under 70C (max of 68C, fan doesn't even come on high until 75C) and it still throttles, which is 15C below where it should thermal throttle. There's a bios issue that cuts clocks for some reason, the desktop raven ridge had the same issue but it's been rectified with bios updates, just need to wait for Dell to fix it. I've tried about 10 different driver revisions, changed the POR settings in bios etc.
And nothing helps.With latest drivers, the performance is still really good even with the clock throttling, so it's not a huge deal for me tbh. Performance is good enough in games I play, though an extra 25% would be nice once they fix it.
I'm actually able to get useable performance in VR (granted, iq isn't very high, but it's useable) with the latest drivers. Sure, load the May 24th drivers from Dell's site here:And update to the 1.2.0 or 1.3.0 bios - the 1.3.0 might cause color shift in games requiring you to disable full screen optimizations, not a big deal, but I didn't notice any difference between 1.2 and 1.3 so maybe stick with 1.2.Dell has released more driver/bios revisions (and much more recent) than any of the other laptop manufacturers that I've seen, and given that the throttling issue has been fixed on desktop boards, I think it's just a matter of time before they do. Even still, the May drivers give a pretty large (20%) boost in performance to where it runs as fast throttled as it did without throttling on the old drivers.
![]() Comments are closed.
|
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
January 2023
Categories |