![]() ![]() It’s after several reboots now and the system is still running at full performance. So I put everything back together and went into Windows, disabled the ThrottleStop startup task and reboot, the CPU is still running at full performance and the Intel XTU does not say Thermal Throttle anymore. Then I unplugged the power cable and reconnected the battery, it powers on fine. Then I unplugged the battery, reconnected the RAMs, and connected the power cable, it boots up this way. It won’t boot and shows 2 orange and 4 white led blinks. Then I put the RAMs back and reconnected the battery. I did a 30-second unplugging power cord, unplugging the battery for 30 seconds, removed the RAMs for 30 seconds, pressing the power button for 30 seconds. I then realized that maybe a CMOS reset could fix the issue, so I followed an instruction of resetting HW without having to unplug the button battery which is on the keyboard side of the motherboard. Thank you very much for explaining this in detail! After my posting, I found the tutorial to set ThrottleStop to start on login (start with system did not work) and it was working fine, until a Windows update that somehow took 6 hours with the slow CPU. The only downside is the configuration is not persistent and I have to do this manually after every system boot.ĭoes anyone have a better solution to this? It no longer shows thermal throttling in Intel eXtreme Tuning tool and performance is restored. The only thing I tried and working well is by using ThrottleStop (uncheck the BD PROCHOT and then click Save). Intel eXtreme Tuning tool says it's doing thermal throttling, and I tried disabling thermal throttling in registry ( ) it allows 100% CPU utilization, but it is still feels slow and the device manager says CPU driver is not working after I changed it. ) and ( ), resetting bios, downgrading bios, resetting Windows 10, reinstalling Windows 10 (including downgrading Windows 10), none of them works. I tried changing performance setting to max, power setting to max, CPU max state to 100%, downgrading DPTF driver according to (. ![]() Recently I found my XPS 15 slow and realized that the CPU was capped at 28% even when it's cool.
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