Did you forget to show us how to see if there were improvements, or are we just meant to guess it worked? Did those changes work for you? Could you do a before and after to show us how much it improved your computer please.
90% of what he said to do is already being done behind the scenes in windows, and some of it could hurt things. Make sure your power profile is set to performance and your cooling is active; ignore the rest.
Bootloop matlab tumhara computer/laptop windows logo pe stuck hojayega ya phir logo tak jaakar band hoga phir chalu hoga or phir se logo tak jaake band hojayega or ye baar baar hote rahega jab tak tum battery remove nhi karo@@_mahi_4740
Hey, please I got a Nvidia GTX 960, i7 2.6ghz and 8gb ram but my PC can't run basic emulators at a playable fps. Actually when I first started playing Pcsx2, it ran perfectly but after 4 days it started lagging and every other emulator I've tried since then also lag. But games like GTA V, NBA 2k21, far cry 4 still run well, it's only the emulators that don't work. Please help out
becarefull with this trik ... 1st aff all. don't forget to create back-up / restore point ... for me doesn't improve at all. but make my bluestack error to run ... for you with bluestack or any VM ... skip it ...
I am not able to download windows 11version 23h2 ( repair version) it shows this update is not ready for your device but update section shows attention needed and this time i am facing hanging issue please make vedio on this sir
@@sangameshmoratagi8799 This is a Microsoft bug, it's not just you, lots of ppl are having issues with updates lately. Either wait for MS to fix it or manually download the ISO from their website and install it that way.
2:28 Does that mean bypassing PL2? Unfortunately my Laptop which "G" Variant doesn't able to UV and this suck when under heavy load. 20W at first then gradually down to
@aoiseirya550 Firstly this video is old outdated info and won't actually do anything. What you need to adjust is under the Control Panel >>System and Security>>Power Options. You need to click "change power settings" on the plan you use and then "advanced options" and go through and adjust things accordingly. Secondly, none of the settings in that video or in the control panel will really do anything about throttling. A CPU automatically throttles (meaning turns down the power) when it hits the max temperature limit of what it can handle. If it's under that temp it will go at full speed until it hits that temp. So if your CPU is throttling it's not a "setting" you need to change, it's mechanical in nature. Either your heatsink is plugged up and needs cleaning, or your heatsink fan is not working properly anymore (eg not spinning as fast as it can due to bad bearings and other junk built up in the motor or possibly the fan is not working at all), or you are simply pushing it beyond it's limits by trying to run a game or something that is too much for that specific CPU/laptop to handle. My guess would be the first 2 are the most likely. Dust and dirt build up in every PC and laptop and eventually clog the heatsinks so instead of the fan blowing cool air on it the air bounces off the dirt and doesn't cool it at all (in fact the dirt insulates the heatsink and holds the heat in). Same with the fan, after time the motors start to wear out or get so much dirt and dust built up in them it limits the speed at which the fan can spin which lowers it's ability to actually cool anything. Best bet is to have a repair shop check it out and replace the fan/heatsink if that's needed. Also just FYI, undervolting a CPU will at best gain you 1 or 2 degrees so not really worth it. And you can't undervolt most laptops because by default laptops run at the lowest voltage the processor can handle and still remain stable. This is done to both reduce the heat the CPU puts out and also to use the least amount of battery power it can. So lowering it further would result in a laptop that simply won't boot because it doesn't have enough power to run the CPU.
@@whmxtra - Under Power Options When you Check High Performance That Disables the CPU Throttling Feature The CPU Clock Speed is then Pegged to its Maximum Frequency The CPU Runs Hotter and all your Thermal Fans Speed up That Creates a Quicker Response Time, Measured in Milliseconds
@@Ford_Raptor_R_720hp_V8 That would be incorrect. Setting to performance only disables core "parking" meaning it will keep all cores active (core parking I think isn't even in there anymore as the whole concept was dumb and it was abandoned a few years ago in favor of idling cores instead which keeps them ready but not using max power) And it has nothing to do with throttling at all (throttling only occurs when a CPU is overheating). And in current times the performance vs balanced settings in the power options are actually pretty much the same, only real difference is time out settings for drives, monitors etc, which can be adjusted from the same power options menu. Really doesn't make an actual difference anymore what setting you put that on though. On top of that it does not peg it to it's max frequency, that is controlled through the bios, not sure what intel calls it nowadays but on AMD it's called performance boost optimization. It will generate more heat with nearly no actual performance boost. With boost on the CPU will up the frequency of 2-4 of the fastest cores (depending on total # of cores) and ram all the code through them, while virtually ignoring all other cores and hyperthreading. Only thing you really gain is heat and power usage. If you actually turn boost off and just run at the stock speeds you'll get about 20 degrees less heat and you actually get the same performance because the system will then stop using just 2 or 4 cores and use all cores and hyperthreading equally. So no performance loss when gaming or doing everyday tasks and by generating less heat your CPU will last longer. The exception to that would be media creation, such as video editing, graphics and animation rendering etc, then the CPU boost will be a plus to have. And yes, I run my CPU with boost off at it's stock 3.6 Ghz setting (with boost on it can hit 4.2 Ghz on all 6 cores). Max temp my CPU ever gets is about 55 Celsius. And that's only when gaming, under regular usage (surfing youtube for example hehe) my average temp is only 41 with the boost off. If I turn boost on it would hit 60 just moving my mouse and gaming would have it pushing 70 or 80. With boost off my CPU stays cooler, it uses less hydro and all my games, programs etc run just as fast and just as smoothly. If you in fact peg a CPU to it's max frequency and run it at that speed you will burn it out in less than a month as they are designed to run at those higher clock speeds only intermittently, if you force it to run at the higher frequency constantly it will literally melt the insides. And just a final point.... this is all actually irrelevant considering the original posters issue had nothing to do with performance, it had to do with their CPU throttling back under heavy load, that has nothing to do with power settings. It's throttling due to high heat, as it's designed to do. The only thing they could try is turning boost off in the laptop bios but I doubt that particular laptop has a boost setting at all, it will be locked at the stock speed which means the only solution is to have it looked at to make sure the fan and heatsink are working properly, maybe a re-paste might be in order. Or simply don't put the laptop under a heavy load, especially if it's an older one (or buy a newer laptop :P)
@@Ford_Raptor_R_720hp_V8 For the second time (lol) you are incorrect. You literally cannot disable throttling, not with a setting, not with an app, there is literally no way to turn that off, the CPU will throttle when it gets too hot no matter what you do, without that feature your CPU would literally melt from the inside out the first time you play a demanding game or open a few too many browser tabs. Power settings also have zero settings regarding frequency so therefore cannot peg a CPU at any frequency, max or not. What it can do is set the idle state to 100% This has nothing to do with frequency, it simply allows the CPU to stay at a ready state rather than letting cores go idle when not needed. This has nothing to do with what frequency the CPU runs at and is also largely irrelevant since the CPU can idle up instantly anyways. This is actually an old setting that was created when they still had core parking, but since they don't park cores anymore the setting has no tangible effect anymore. Actually most of the power settings don't really do anything, save for the ones about turning drives off, screensaver/monitor stuff etc. And the drive setting only applies to actual HD's with spinning disks, it has no effect on SSD drives.
Remember that:
Disabling power throttling may cause overheating and instability on your system (especially Laptops)
Did you forget to show us how to see if there were improvements, or are we just meant to guess it worked? Did those changes work for you? Could you do a before and after to show us how much it improved your computer please.
90% of what he said to do is already being done behind the scenes in windows, and some of it could hurt things. Make sure your power profile is set to performance and your cooling is active; ignore the rest.
Please don't do the first tip otherwise you will have a bootloop. Don't say that I didn't warn you.
What do u mean by boot laptop
Bootloop matlab tumhara computer/laptop windows logo pe stuck hojayega ya phir logo tak jaakar band hoga phir chalu hoga or phir se logo tak jaake band hojayega or ye baar baar hote rahega jab tak tum battery remove nhi karo@@_mahi_4740
Real one
BootLoop you dumb@@_mahi_4740
which one? the one where he increased processors?
Thx for uploading this kind of vdo.
dont do these. if u want faster cpu buy faster cpu only way. or oc it, possibly max 20% increase from oc
Hes helping people on laptop and desktops with non-overclockable cpus
@@TheInvisNoob yes but the thing is that windows does these with basic settings too. its just adaptive so its not all the time on full power
@@HunTiXs true but some people can't buy a CPU because of budget and compatibilities on laptops/OEM hardware
well cpu power should be on 100 % always.
@@yxon1ph no it shouldn't because you will lose life out of your CPU, it should be 100% when you are actually using it
Thanks man ❤, this really made a difference.
To everyone, please apply all steps and then restart
hi
in bios i set my 5900x 4.4ghz with 1.2volts should i still follow your steps
does it make a difference
None of them works because Windows default uses maximum processors.
Yep, this guy just did something vain
This trick is work and my FPS also increase after doing this tip
You should explain what is meant by each thing. Just clicking buttons here and there is just a mechanical thing.
Most wanted vdo for me❤
Don’t do this your game will keep on crashing and won’t play your games ever again
New Subscriber 🎉❤
when i saw this msconfig i know its a trash.. that things is for you to troubleshoot issue if your pc run lower than the threads you have.
NOTE: The 2nd tip, or the group policy editor, is only available to pro or enterprise editions of Windows, not home.
That's what I said, you need to enable that fir which I have created a video
Please help on the step four, i have processor information not processer
Warning: if you put number of processors to max, you will be losing some life out of your CPU. If you need it then you can make it almost max or max
Omg stop giving crap advice, the boot option for processors, is in case one of the cores is damaged, it's for diagnostics, nothing else
yup all times dumb guys
@@lyonmuzik33 Lol This guy is a no braino
In the fourth step i don't see processer, Only processor information. What do i do?
major thing is debloating background stuff
And something for boost GPU?
Hey, please I got a Nvidia GTX 960, i7 2.6ghz and 8gb ram but my PC can't run basic emulators at a playable fps. Actually when I first started playing Pcsx2, it ran perfectly but after 4 days it started lagging and every other emulator I've tried since then also lag. But games like GTA V, NBA 2k21, far cry 4 still run well, it's only the emulators that don't work. Please help out
Can someone tell me what are the tip should i do and tip should i don't do
My processor is a intel core i5 9th gen and graphics card is nvidia gtx 1050. I play in my gaming laptop
Processor stuk on base speed 2.59 ghz after doing this
Before it's warking over 3ghz
Loss 😐
before reboot pc the cpu boost is stop, can is start on boot?
when i create restore point after next 3-4 days this restore point go away by itself plz solve this
you dont need it, if it breaks then you need it
And how to make your fans sound like a jet!
becarefull with this trik ... 1st aff all. don't forget to create back-up / restore point ... for me doesn't improve at all. but make my bluestack error to run ... for you with bluestack or any VM ... skip it ...
hi
in bios i set my 5900x 4.4ghz with 1.2volts should i still follow your steps
does it make a difference
It will make
Just enable the resizable bar.
I am not able to download windows 11version 23h2 ( repair version) it shows this update is not ready for your device but update section shows attention needed and this time i am facing hanging issue please make vedio on this sir
Just created a video, check my latest videos
I am not getting sir my issues is not Downloading 23h2 repair version since 2 weeks it's irritates me lot
@@sangameshmoratagi8799 This is a Microsoft bug, it's not just you, lots of ppl are having issues with updates lately. Either wait for MS to fix it or manually download the ISO from their website and install it that way.
brother pls make a video about before and after cpu please
Sure
@@CrownGEEK thx 😊
Bro i think power throttling is bad. Because enabling it, it reduces cpu performance. it is according to google and people review
Bro , you are right . We have to disable it and that is what I have shown in the video.
wtf mine runs at 4.2g in 1% util
Link for Download GTA 6 Beta?
Guys, don't. This video is more pointless and potentially harmful than helpful.
And can u tell why?
@@CrownGEEK Yes, of course.
@@rootuser7206 please tell
plz make a vidio how to download palworld free in pc
You tak to fast bro where are you rushing to
opičak
2:28 Does that mean bypassing PL2? Unfortunately my Laptop which "G" Variant doesn't able to UV and this suck when under heavy load.
20W at first then gradually down to
@aoiseirya550 Firstly this video is old outdated info and won't actually do anything. What you need to adjust is under the Control Panel >>System and Security>>Power Options. You need to click "change power settings" on the plan you use and then "advanced options" and go through and adjust things accordingly.
Secondly, none of the settings in that video or in the control panel will really do anything about throttling. A CPU automatically throttles (meaning turns down the power) when it hits the max temperature limit of what it can handle. If it's under that temp it will go at full speed until it hits that temp. So if your CPU is throttling it's not a "setting" you need to change, it's mechanical in nature. Either your heatsink is plugged up and needs cleaning, or your heatsink fan is not working properly anymore (eg not spinning as fast as it can due to bad bearings and other junk built up in the motor or possibly the fan is not working at all), or you are simply pushing it beyond it's limits by trying to run a game or something that is too much for that specific CPU/laptop to handle. My guess would be the first 2 are the most likely. Dust and dirt build up in every PC and laptop and eventually clog the heatsinks so instead of the fan blowing cool air on it the air bounces off the dirt and doesn't cool it at all (in fact the dirt insulates the heatsink and holds the heat in). Same with the fan, after time the motors start to wear out or get so much dirt and dust built up in them it limits the speed at which the fan can spin which lowers it's ability to actually cool anything. Best bet is to have a repair shop check it out and replace the fan/heatsink if that's needed.
Also just FYI, undervolting a CPU will at best gain you 1 or 2 degrees so not really worth it. And you can't undervolt most laptops because by default laptops run at the lowest voltage the processor can handle and still remain stable. This is done to both reduce the heat the CPU puts out and also to use the least amount of battery power it can. So lowering it further would result in a laptop that simply won't boot because it doesn't have enough power to run the CPU.
@@whmxtra - Under Power Options
When you Check High Performance
That Disables the CPU Throttling Feature
The CPU Clock Speed is then Pegged to its Maximum Frequency
The CPU Runs Hotter and all your Thermal Fans Speed up
That Creates a Quicker Response Time, Measured in Milliseconds
@@Ford_Raptor_R_720hp_V8 That would be incorrect. Setting to performance only disables core "parking" meaning it will keep all cores active (core parking I think isn't even in there anymore as the whole concept was dumb and it was abandoned a few years ago in favor of idling cores instead which keeps them ready but not using max power)
And it has nothing to do with throttling at all (throttling only occurs when a CPU is overheating). And in current times the performance vs balanced settings in the power options are actually pretty much the same, only real difference is time out settings for drives, monitors etc, which can be adjusted from the same power options menu. Really doesn't make an actual difference anymore what setting you put that on though.
On top of that it does not peg it to it's max frequency, that is controlled through the bios, not sure what intel calls it nowadays but on AMD it's called performance boost optimization. It will generate more heat with nearly no actual performance boost. With boost on the CPU will up the frequency of 2-4 of the fastest cores (depending on total # of cores) and ram all the code through them, while virtually ignoring all other cores and hyperthreading. Only thing you really gain is heat and power usage. If you actually turn boost off and just run at the stock speeds you'll get about 20 degrees less heat and you actually get the same performance because the system will then stop using just 2 or 4 cores and use all cores and hyperthreading equally. So no performance loss when gaming or doing everyday tasks and by generating less heat your CPU will last longer.
The exception to that would be media creation, such as video editing, graphics and animation rendering etc, then the CPU boost will be a plus to have. And yes, I run my CPU with boost off at it's stock 3.6 Ghz setting (with boost on it can hit 4.2 Ghz on all 6 cores). Max temp my CPU ever gets is about 55 Celsius. And that's only when gaming, under regular usage (surfing youtube for example hehe) my average temp is only 41 with the boost off. If I turn boost on it would hit 60 just moving my mouse and gaming would have it pushing 70 or 80. With boost off my CPU stays cooler, it uses less hydro and all my games, programs etc run just as fast and just as smoothly.
If you in fact peg a CPU to it's max frequency and run it at that speed you will burn it out in less than a month as they are designed to run at those higher clock speeds only intermittently, if you force it to run at the higher frequency constantly it will literally melt the insides.
And just a final point.... this is all actually irrelevant considering the original posters issue had nothing to do with performance, it had to do with their CPU throttling back under heavy load, that has nothing to do with power settings. It's throttling due to high heat, as it's designed to do. The only thing they could try is turning boost off in the laptop bios but I doubt that particular laptop has a boost setting at all, it will be locked at the stock speed which means the only solution is to have it looked at to make sure the fan and heatsink are working properly, maybe a re-paste might be in order. Or simply don't put the laptop under a heavy load, especially if it's an older one (or buy a newer laptop :P)
@@whmxtra The High Performance Power Option. Disables the CPU Throttling Feature, and Pegs the Clock Speed at Maximum Frequency.
@@Ford_Raptor_R_720hp_V8 For the second time (lol) you are incorrect. You literally cannot disable throttling, not with a setting, not with an app, there is literally no way to turn that off, the CPU will throttle when it gets too hot no matter what you do, without that feature your CPU would literally melt from the inside out the first time you play a demanding game or open a few too many browser tabs.
Power settings also have zero settings regarding frequency so therefore cannot peg a CPU at any frequency, max or not. What it can do is set the idle state to 100% This has nothing to do with frequency, it simply allows the CPU to stay at a ready state rather than letting cores go idle when not needed. This has nothing to do with what frequency the CPU runs at and is also largely irrelevant since the CPU can idle up instantly anyways. This is actually an old setting that was created when they still had core parking, but since they don't park cores anymore the setting has no tangible effect anymore.
Actually most of the power settings don't really do anything, save for the ones about turning drives off, screensaver/monitor stuff etc. And the drive setting only applies to actual HD's with spinning disks, it has no effect on SSD drives.
oooo whatyou have 16 cores
Mw too
This is crap