Ionico 11800h/rtx3080 Mode IGPU Big problem fréquence CPU/battery

DarkPaladin

Enthusiast
@williamrichier352 This is extremely important.
If you are going to do this do not touch anything unless you know what you are doing.
the I7-11800H is not compatible with XTU and it is possible to brick your laptop if you change the wrong setting in there.
That changes a lot unfortunately. I'd typically ask them to perform a stress test to check for throttling and potentially change the PL limits to the CPU's actual PL (assuming something went wrong), but if altering anything with that CPU could cause bricks, then I'd personally avoid my previous suggestion and personally send it to PCSpecialist to check instead.
 

barlew

Godlike
That changes a lot unfortunately. I'd typically ask them to perform a stress test to check for throttling and potentially change the PL limits to the CPU's actual PL (assuming something went wrong), but if altering anything with that CPU could cause bricks, then I'd personally avoid my previous suggestion and personally send it to PCSpecialist to check instead.
If you want to do something like that I would recommend doing it through ThrottleStop.
XTU writes directly to the BIOS which is why it can brick the laptop. Throttlestop works at the OS level so if something goes wrong and the system crashes you can just reboot.
 

FerrariVie

Super Star
If you want to do something like that I would recommend doing it through ThrottleStop.
XTU writes directly to the BIOS which is why it can brick the laptop. Throttlestop works at the OS level so if something goes wrong and the system crashes you can just reboot.
I'm not an Intel expert, but always thought that any unstable overclock that was done on the bios could be recovered by doing a bios reset (removing the CMOS battery for a few seconds and putting it back). That should work either for desktops or laptops, if I'm not wrong :unsure:
 

SpyderTracks

We love you Ukraine
I'm not an Intel expert, but always thought that any unstable overclock that was done on the bios could be recovered by doing a bios reset (removing the CMOS battery for a few seconds and putting it back). That should work either for desktops or laptops, if I'm not wrong :unsure:
That's only if you don't fry the CPU / Mobo in the process.
 

barlew

Godlike
I'm not an Intel expert, but always thought that any unstable overclock that was done on the bios could be recovered by doing a bios reset (removing the CMOS battery for a few seconds and putting it back). That should work either for desktops or laptops, if I'm not wrong :unsure:
You can do other things through XTU not just overclock. If you under-volt It too much for instance you can get to a position where the laptop won't even boot to BIOS to make changes. There were problems with the 10th gen laptops where people could not recover through the CMOS I believe because XTU was literally overwriting values.

And obviously @SpyderTracks point too.
 
Last edited:
Top