how to set DELL Precision 5530 running Windows 10 to run I7 processor at max speed (4.3GHZ) continually?
Need to run our Intel I7 6core processor at max speed of 4.3GHZ on our Dell Prec 5530 laptop, so that our computation app (compiled by Julia lang) runs continually at max speed 4.3GHZ.
I tried going to bios and disabling Power Mgmt block sleep and Intel speed shift,
but Windows Task Manager still shows processor speed between 1 and 2 GHz and never 4.3GHZ. When I run our app, speed gets swings between 2 GHZ AND 4 GHZ.
windows-10 cpu intel-core-i7 dell-precision
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Need to run our Intel I7 6core processor at max speed of 4.3GHZ on our Dell Prec 5530 laptop, so that our computation app (compiled by Julia lang) runs continually at max speed 4.3GHZ.
I tried going to bios and disabling Power Mgmt block sleep and Intel speed shift,
but Windows Task Manager still shows processor speed between 1 and 2 GHz and never 4.3GHZ. When I run our app, speed gets swings between 2 GHZ AND 4 GHZ.
windows-10 cpu intel-core-i7 dell-precision
add a comment |
Need to run our Intel I7 6core processor at max speed of 4.3GHZ on our Dell Prec 5530 laptop, so that our computation app (compiled by Julia lang) runs continually at max speed 4.3GHZ.
I tried going to bios and disabling Power Mgmt block sleep and Intel speed shift,
but Windows Task Manager still shows processor speed between 1 and 2 GHz and never 4.3GHZ. When I run our app, speed gets swings between 2 GHZ AND 4 GHZ.
windows-10 cpu intel-core-i7 dell-precision
Need to run our Intel I7 6core processor at max speed of 4.3GHZ on our Dell Prec 5530 laptop, so that our computation app (compiled by Julia lang) runs continually at max speed 4.3GHZ.
I tried going to bios and disabling Power Mgmt block sleep and Intel speed shift,
but Windows Task Manager still shows processor speed between 1 and 2 GHz and never 4.3GHZ. When I run our app, speed gets swings between 2 GHZ AND 4 GHZ.
windows-10 cpu intel-core-i7 dell-precision
windows-10 cpu intel-core-i7 dell-precision
asked Jan 25 at 0:39
Doug NullDoug Null
3002723
3002723
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There is no advantage in forcing the CPU to run faster, since it's speed is determined by load. It slows down when there is less demand, e.g. the proprietary app is performing disk I/O, which is not CPU intensive. It is also possible the app is not making full use of multi-core CPU's -- independent threads may be blocking each other, for example, over a resource.
You would be better served by setting the customized computation application's priority to a higher level. This can be done easily with Task Manager or Process Explorer, as shown below.
- Press CtrlShiftEsc to open Task Manager.
- Right-click on the application process(es).
- Select a higher priority, e.g. High or Above normal. N.B. Setting the process to Realtime may make the PC quite unresponsive.
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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
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active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
There is no advantage in forcing the CPU to run faster, since it's speed is determined by load. It slows down when there is less demand, e.g. the proprietary app is performing disk I/O, which is not CPU intensive. It is also possible the app is not making full use of multi-core CPU's -- independent threads may be blocking each other, for example, over a resource.
You would be better served by setting the customized computation application's priority to a higher level. This can be done easily with Task Manager or Process Explorer, as shown below.
- Press CtrlShiftEsc to open Task Manager.
- Right-click on the application process(es).
- Select a higher priority, e.g. High or Above normal. N.B. Setting the process to Realtime may make the PC quite unresponsive.
add a comment |
There is no advantage in forcing the CPU to run faster, since it's speed is determined by load. It slows down when there is less demand, e.g. the proprietary app is performing disk I/O, which is not CPU intensive. It is also possible the app is not making full use of multi-core CPU's -- independent threads may be blocking each other, for example, over a resource.
You would be better served by setting the customized computation application's priority to a higher level. This can be done easily with Task Manager or Process Explorer, as shown below.
- Press CtrlShiftEsc to open Task Manager.
- Right-click on the application process(es).
- Select a higher priority, e.g. High or Above normal. N.B. Setting the process to Realtime may make the PC quite unresponsive.
add a comment |
There is no advantage in forcing the CPU to run faster, since it's speed is determined by load. It slows down when there is less demand, e.g. the proprietary app is performing disk I/O, which is not CPU intensive. It is also possible the app is not making full use of multi-core CPU's -- independent threads may be blocking each other, for example, over a resource.
You would be better served by setting the customized computation application's priority to a higher level. This can be done easily with Task Manager or Process Explorer, as shown below.
- Press CtrlShiftEsc to open Task Manager.
- Right-click on the application process(es).
- Select a higher priority, e.g. High or Above normal. N.B. Setting the process to Realtime may make the PC quite unresponsive.
There is no advantage in forcing the CPU to run faster, since it's speed is determined by load. It slows down when there is less demand, e.g. the proprietary app is performing disk I/O, which is not CPU intensive. It is also possible the app is not making full use of multi-core CPU's -- independent threads may be blocking each other, for example, over a resource.
You would be better served by setting the customized computation application's priority to a higher level. This can be done easily with Task Manager or Process Explorer, as shown below.
- Press CtrlShiftEsc to open Task Manager.
- Right-click on the application process(es).
- Select a higher priority, e.g. High or Above normal. N.B. Setting the process to Realtime may make the PC quite unresponsive.
answered Jan 25 at 1:24
DrMoishe PippikDrMoishe Pippik
10.3k21432
10.3k21432
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