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- bramturismo
I was just browsing around on the internet when I spotted a mention of laptops and overclocking.
I understand it's risky business since it can potentially void your warranty and build up lots of heat. Is there anyone who has ever tried overclocking a laptop?
Reason I'm asking is that well... If it works, why not give it a shot? I'm not sure what kind of improvements I'm looking at, but I'd love a small improvement in gaming performance. For some odd reason, the frame rate drops quite monumentally between me running Crysis in my native resolution, 1368X766, and any lower resolution. Both running at the exact same graphical spec.
My ASUS laptop was bought in July so it's still a new laptop that has been handling everything I've thrown at it so far but I'll never say no to an extra 5 FPS when playing Crysis with such gorgeous graphics.
As far as heat is concerned, I'm running a Core i3 so it doesn't come close to heat producing and power consumption of an i7. The laptop doesn't feel even warm at any given spot other than the air coming out of the fan. May I at this point brag about ASUS' job on heat isolating this machine? It's brilliant!
Basically I'm only looking for some extra framerates in Crysis since everything else runs like a train on this nifty laptop. If overclocking doesn't even improve gaming performance than it's not needed to "over-stress" my laptop at all. Neither would it be worth the trouble if I'm looking at an only minor performance increase of 2-3 FPS
I understand it's risky business since it can potentially void your warranty and build up lots of heat. Is there anyone who has ever tried overclocking a laptop?
Reason I'm asking is that well... If it works, why not give it a shot? I'm not sure what kind of improvements I'm looking at, but I'd love a small improvement in gaming performance. For some odd reason, the frame rate drops quite monumentally between me running Crysis in my native resolution, 1368X766, and any lower resolution. Both running at the exact same graphical spec.
My ASUS laptop was bought in July so it's still a new laptop that has been handling everything I've thrown at it so far but I'll never say no to an extra 5 FPS when playing Crysis with such gorgeous graphics.
As far as heat is concerned, I'm running a Core i3 so it doesn't come close to heat producing and power consumption of an i7. The laptop doesn't feel even warm at any given spot other than the air coming out of the fan. May I at this point brag about ASUS' job on heat isolating this machine? It's brilliant!
Basically I'm only looking for some extra framerates in Crysis since everything else runs like a train on this nifty laptop. If overclocking doesn't even improve gaming performance than it's not needed to "over-stress" my laptop at all. Neither would it be worth the trouble if I'm looking at an only minor performance increase of 2-3 FPS