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rd1002021-12-30 10:52:58
laptops
rd100, 2021-12-30 10:52:58

If the processor is 15W and 35W, will they heat the laptop at the same load in the same way?

There is a laptop where the processor eats 15W and it is quiet in the trailer and does not heat up without serious loads.
There is the same version, only pro, it is on i3, and i5 has 35W consumption and 2 times more cores.

Will it warm up by default 2 times more due to the fact that it consumes 35W?
Or is this the maximum consumption and at the same loads it will consume the same watts as the i3, and will not heat the laptop?

https://technical.city/ru/cpu/Core-i3-1005G1-proti...

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Sergey, 2021-12-30
@edinorog

the concept of "the same load" exists in the world of spherical horses in a vacuum. we have a task. We have software that will perform it. the logic of the software is to use the resources allocated to it to complete the task. while one percent will fart performing it within the framework of one heat pack ... the second one will heat up to the state of a superstar and quietly peacefully (at the end) will switch back to the background power consumption mode.

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Ricardo Sanchez, 2021-12-30
@yakovlev_13

You don't think about it a little here. In W, not energy consumption is measured here, but heat generation.
And yes, it will get hotter. Look on the Internet for what is the maximum possible percentage that your model gets into with its cooling system.
If the system is already dead on its own and in battle for 10 years, then its tired tubes may not be able to cope. You will have both throttling and cuts.

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