LG G6 Lags after long gaming - LG G6 Questions and Answers

So I got G6 yesterday and I liked it. but, after about 30-60 mins of gaming, the device starts to slow down
For example, I was playing PUBG at high settings at ~45 fps, but after some time , it drops to ~20 fps, extremely unplayable
Is there anyway to fix it??
I've heard that CPU Throttling is the problem, but I didnt find a way to disable it
I am using the LG H870DS Model

Then cool your Phone with something down, like playing under Water.
Of course its throttling down, cause of the Heat, LOL.
You were able to find XDA Forum and to login, so you cannot be stupid like that, not to know what thermal throttling means -.-

ric84 said:
Then cool your Phone with something down, like playing under Water.
Of course its throttling down, cause of the Heat, LOL.
You were able to find XDA Forum and to login, so you cannot be stupid like that, not to know what thermal throttling means -.-
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am aware that thermal throttling was caused by excessive heat
If I am not mistaken, Thermal throttling is basically CPU and GPU underclocking automatically when reaching high temperature (50 celcius most of the time) to avoid potential hardware failure
But the problem is the throttling was so bad. compared to my other phone. But yeah I am aware that thermal throttling exist for a good reason

You play too much mobile Games, take a Computer and become Masterrace ?

Related

[Q] Nexus 4 GPU Frame Rates Drops

Hello Guys, i registered to XDA developers to ask this question so please reply. i heard many say GPU of Nexus 4 is very bad because after 20 mins of gameplay the phone gets heated and the GPU performance is Dramatically Reduced to cooldown. I am going to buy Nexus 4 thats y im asking, i didnt hear this from my neighbours..., i saw someone say this in youtube comments. Anyone Experiencing this Issue? or its a defective product?.
This is a good thread to read about Thermal Throttling: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2144652
I am not sure about the GPU actually reducing it's power when the nexus is getting hot. I know the CPU will clock lower when it has reached 70 degrees so it can cool down. Most kernel's have the ability to up this to about 100 degrees so you won't have the thermal throttling as fast. You are also able to remove the throttling completely with a commando.
I've played alot of Dungeon Hunter 4/GTA Vice City/Real Racing 3 and I have never experienced severe FPS drops because of it getting hotter. The only thing you will experience is a battery that will be empty within 2 hours.
PS: This is based on what i've read on the forums, I do not have my nexus 4 for that long and I am not a developer, someone might be able to give you more accurate information.
The thermald.conf sets the battery threshold to about 40-41C before it begins to underclock aggressively (hence why it feels sluggish). I forget the exact number. It starts reading "Overheating" status when it reaches about 46C. Max rated temperature for the battery is 60C.
At that battery temperature ~41C, the CPU is no more than about 50C, so it's not the CPU overheating.
If you feel so inclined, you can modify the thermald.conf with root to modify how aggressive the thermal throttling acts, within reason. Otherwise you'll cook your phone.
desynch- said:
The thermald.conf sets the battery threshold to about 40-41C before it begins to underclock aggressively (hence why it feels sluggish). I forget the exact number.
At that temperature, the CPU is no more than about 50C.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
or you can run a custom kernel(like trinity) that disables the battery thermal throttle and not worry about it.
simms22 said:
or you can run a custom kernel(like trinity) that disables the battery thermal throttle and not worry about it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
YMMV with that. My nominal binned SoC overheats really easily. With the way I use my phone, it'd be overheating way too often.
I modified my thermald.conf so it's less aggressive. It's not that hard to figure out.
The phone throttles its clock speed like a PC. It's not a big deal.

[Q] Phone overheats while gaming

Hi,
I've been using G2 for the past one week. Within minutes of playing a game( `10 mins), the phone heats up a lot at the back where the camera is placed.
I dont even need to play high end games like NOVA 3. Just regular games like Candy crush, Cut the rope etc heats up my phone real bad.
It heats up so much that its impossible to touch it with your hand.
Please advice if anyone has faced this issue.
Regards
Georgi
georgijmeleth said:
Hi,
I've been using G2 for the past one week. Within minutes of playing a game( `10 mins), the phone heats up a lot at the back where the camera is placed.
I dont even need to play high end games like NOVA 3. Just regular games like Candy crush, Cut the rope etc heats up my phone real bad.
It heats up so much that its impossible to touch it with your hand.
Please advice if anyone has faced this issue.
Regards
Georgi
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Same with me, but only plants vs zombies 2 may be its just one game.
Please don't post same question in more than one thread. Your question belongs in the question and answer section where you have it now also. Not here please.
Same here. Maximum overheating is seen during plants and zombie 2.
Hi,
Guys you realize that you have a quadcore at 2.26 Ghz... And when you play a (heavy) game or some other heavy tasks (browsing in 4G for example) it's normal that the CPU heats, right?
Temperature is very subjective without reading the CPU temp with an app, it feels hot in your hand (you can have cold hands and in this case you feel much more the heat) and it's hot because the CPU temp is about 90°C is different...
Heat and overheat (or "maximum overheating" like above ) is different too..., in any case there is a thermal throttling that prevent overheating. Our CPU shutdowns at 120°C so there is a little room... Even 80°C is nothing for the CPU...
Even 90°C for the CPU temperature is almost nothing (for the the stressed people) and there is a thermal protection in any case. Thermal throttling that reduces the CPU freq according to the CPU temp, same thing for the battery. And in case of extreme temperature -> shutdown.
And if you speak about "overheating" when playing a game or browsing while charging your phone...
Check your CPU temp with an app and report here...
It remembers me all the threads about "overheating" in the Nexus 4 forum...
I will definitely try installing a temperature app and will report the temp soon.
I'm worried that the heating takes place near the area where the camera is located. Can this have any adverse effect on the camera?
georgijmeleth said:
I will definitely try installing a temperature app and will report the temp soon.
I'm worried that the heating takes place near the area where the camera is located. Can this have any adverse effect on the camera?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I cant vouch for a smartphone camera in general, but I know I had a newer regular old camera that sat in the sun and the heat for a day, and was perfectly fine. I don't see the heat damaging the camera.

[Q] How to tweak this kernel?

How to tweak this kernel for stopping G2 from overheating? Even I lowered my CPU to 1ghz it is still overheating. :crying: please help. thanks
Hi,
What is exactly overheating for you???
Can you share your CPU/battery temperatures?
Overheating... But when? When playing a game while downloading a huge file over 4G and while charging?
viking37 said:
Hi,
Guys you realize that you have a quadcore at 2.26 Ghz... And when you play a (heavy) game or some other heavy tasks (browsing in 4G for example) it's normal that the CPU heats, right?
Temperature is very subjective without reading the CPU temp with an app, it feels hot in your hand (you can have cold hands and in this case you feel much more the heat) and it's hot because the CPU temp is about 90°C is different...
Heat and overheat (or "maximum overheating" like above ) is different too..., in any case there is a thermal throttling that prevent overheating. Our CPU shutdowns at 120°C so there is a little room... Even 80°C is nothing for the CPU...
Even 90°C for the CPU temperature is almost nothing (for the the stressed people) and there is a thermal protection in any case. Thermal throttling that reduces the CPU freq according to the CPU temp, same thing for the battery. And in case of extreme temperature -> shutdown.
And if you speak about "overheating" when playing a game or browsing while charging your phone...
Check your CPU temp with an app and report here...
It remembers me all the threads about "overheating" in the Nexus 4 forum...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
After that you can try to undervolt a little (be carefull, step by step and don't set your undervolt at boot unless you're sure it's stable) and play with the thermal control by decreasing the max CPU temperature before thermal throttling...
You can use an app like Trickster Mod or Faux123 app (kernel enhancement) on the Play Store.
viking37 said:
Hi,
What is exactly overheating for you???
Can you share your CPU/battery temperatures?
Overheating... But when? When playing a game while downloading a huge file over 4G and while charging?
After that you can try to undervolt a little (be carefull, step by step and don't set your undervolt at boot unless you're sure it's stable) and play with the thermal control by decreasing the max CPU temperature before thermal throttling...
You can use an app like Trickster Mod or Faux123 app (kernel enhancement) on the Play Store.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
After playing heavy games, I can use my phone to iron clothes. lol. Well, I know it have quad core that's why I bought it. And I think having this kind of power is a disadvantage too because it heats very quickly like 10mins of heavy gaming.. And by heating it decreases the battery life.. I don't want to use this quad core phone in just browsing and watching video only, i bought this for gaming also.. lol
I don't know now where to use these quad cores.. lol... I envy my brother now, playing games smoothly on his ip5s with cool temp.. >.<
I have fauxclock and leave it to Intellithermal frequency throttle temp:80c and core throttle temp 85c. Is that ok?
Thanks :cyclops:
Re,
Hummm..... :laugh:
Decrease the two temperatures of 10°C... And use Ondemand or Interactive governor with MpDesicion "on"...
Try undervolt/underclock a little... No need to underclock at 1 Ghz otherwise, right, it will lag...
But I don't think you really understand what I was trying to say... Heavy games+quadcore 2,26 Ghz+10 mins of use with that...= heat (and not overheating), are you sure there is something wrong or abnormal?
What is your CPU/battery temperatures???
And please don't compare our CPU's with the one in the Iphhone 5, it's not the same thing.
viking37 said:
Re,
Hummm..... :laugh:
Decrease the two temperatures of 10°C... And use Ondemand or Interactive governor with MpDesicion "on"...
Try undervolt/underclock a little... No need to underclock at 1 Ghz otherwise, right, it will lag...
But I don't think you really understand what I was trying to say... Heavy games+quadcore 2,26 Ghz+10 mins of use with that...= heat (and not overheating), are you sure there is something wrong or abnormal?
What is your CPU/battery temperatures???
And please don't compare our CPU's with the one in the Iphhone 5, it's not the same thing.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think its totally heat. But is it ok to heat it for like 1hr straight? Will it decrease the lifespan of my battery?
Well, i'm not comparing it, just envy. >.< haha
Thanks again.
Do you play clash of clans?
Scorbion said:
Do you play clash of clans?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yup I also play that game? Why?
----
maybe guys you can help me also on undervolting d802 for gaming?
thanks
coowkeee said:
maybe guys you can help me also on undervolting d802 for gaming?
thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi,
Is that too hard to do it by yourself . This:
viking37 said:
After that you can try to undervolt a little (be carefull, step by step and don't set your undervolt at boot unless you're sure it's stable).
...
You can use an app like Trickster Mod or Faux123 app (kernel enhancement) on the Play Store.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Begin with -25 mV but don't set at boot, use your phone for a day like as always (games, browsing, etc...). If you don't have reboots or anything wrong then try another step by - 25 mV. If you went too low your phone will reboot, (so don't use the set/apply on boot setting or you could have a bootloop), at this point you"ll know the undervolt possibility. Apply your last setting before the crash and see...
I don't know what we could do more... I think you need to read a bit more
viking37 said:
Hi,
Is that too hard to do it by yourself . This:
Begin with -25 mV but don't set at boot, use your phone for a day like as always (games, browsing, etc...). If you don't have reboots or anything wrong then try another step by - 25 mV. If you went too low your phone will reboot, (so don't use the set/apply on boot setting or you could have a bootloop), at this point you"ll know the undervolt possibility. Apply your last setting before the crash and see...
I don't know what we could do more... I think you need to read a bit more
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Heloo i have the same problem when i play games likeplants vs zombies my phone hetas badly imen like 70°C(160°F) and i dont think it normal in like 10 to 15 min to be like that,i have root andtrickster app instaled and i alawys check the temperature.
I know its normal for the phone to heat but not so fast i seen thrads where users reported theyre g2 doesent heat bad att all.I have cpu threshold. on ,activated it from secret men.
So please helpwith advice and youre experience with this problem.
Thank you!
Hi,
Strif3, it's normal, point. 70°C is the CPU temperature limit before thermal throttling. What can I say more??? Read my posts above...
Use your phone like you want, as usual in any case there is a thermal protection! I think that Qualcomm knows how their SoC needs to be set about thermal stuff and I think (I'm sure) you can play heavy games without any issues even if your phone is at 70°C.
If your CPU temp was at 100°C (without modifie the thermal throttling), ok maybe here there is a problem (it depends also what you are doing), but I repeat 70°C during a game and after 10 mins i's totally normal!
If you all guys are worried about the CPU temperature, stop playing games, browsing in 4G and underclock your CPU to 300 Mhz and all will be fine...
coowkeee said:
Yup I also play that game? Why?
----
maybe guys you can help me also on undervolting d802 for gaming?
thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That game is known to be a battery major drainer and heat producer.
أرسلت من LG-D802 بإستخدام تاباتلك
viking37 said:
Hi,
Strif3, it's normal, point. 70°C is the CPU temperature limit before thermal throttling. What can I say more??? Read my posts above...
Use your phone like you want, as usual in any case there is a thermal protection! I think that Qualcomm knows how their SoC needs to be set about thermal stuff and I think (I'm sure) you can play heavy games without any issues even if your phone is at 70°C.
If your CPU temp was at 100°C (without modifie the thermal throttling), ok maybe here there is a problem (it depends also what you are doing), but I repeat 70°C during a game and after 10 mins i's totally normal!
If you all guys are worried about the CPU temperature, stop playing games, browsing in 4G and underclock your CPU to 300 Mhz and all will be fine...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Aha i understand i must mention the cpu frequency at 70°C is like 1Ghz but no loss in performance and in browsing,music and youtube no heating problems.Just wanted to know its not a issue with my phone.
Thnx for info

G3 Temperature Throttling

Stuck my phone in the freezer for a few minutes, took it out, and ran the stability test in AnTuTu which plots the temperature and a benchmark score. Looks like it starts right around 34 degrees (93 Fahrenheit), which really isn't that warm at all. You could get that just browsing around and holding it in your hand.
My cpu temp is normally in the 40's and 50's while browsing.
Have you tried turning the thermal daemon mitigation and high temperature property off in the hidden menu and see if this throttling happen? Will be interesting to know if the hidden menu selection works.
ddeath said:
Have you tried turning the thermal daemon mitigation and high temperature property off in the hidden menu and see if this throttling happen? Will be interesting to know if the hidden menu selection works.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It does work. you can just open an app like setcpu and you'll see that it rarely peaks without disabling throttling. Just be careful as it does open you up to potential hardware failures and shorter life of the device. I only keep phones for around 6 months so I don't care but I'm not a normal usage case.
arcanexvi said:
It does work. you can just open an app like setcpu and you'll see that it rarely peaks without disabling throttling. Just be careful as it does open you up to potential hardware failures and shorter life of the device. I only keep phones for around 6 months so I don't care but I'm not a normal usage case.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wouldn't the hardware still have a thermal cut off point where it will just shut down the phone if it gets too hot? It's to my understanding that this hardware shut off point is different than the software thermal throttling. If anything, I think it will just make your device get too hot for comfort than do any real hardware damage to it.
I'm just throwing an educated guess out there though, I honestly have no real proof one way or the other.
Enddo said:
Wouldn't the hardware still have a thermal cut off point where it will just shut down the phone if it gets too hot? It's to my understanding that this hardware shut off point is different than the software thermal throttling. If anything, I think it will just make your device get too hot for comfort than do any real hardware damage to it.
I'm just throwing an educated guess out there though, I honestly have no real proof one way or the other.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes eventually it'll hit tjunction and shut down. This isn't even a safe shut down though. It is basically an emergency kill switch. It's like yanking the cord out of the wall on a desktop. Running at higher temps also shortens the life of the silicone. Much the same effect that overclocking has on a normal PC.
Enddo said:
Wouldn't the hardware still have a thermal cut off point where it will just shut down the phone if it gets too hot? It's to my understanding that this hardware shut off point is different than the software thermal throttling. If anything, I think it will just make your device get too hot for comfort than do any real hardware damage to it.
I'm just throwing an educated guess out there though, I honestly have no real proof one way or the other.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If it gets hot, it will do damage. It can fry the GPU before it even gets to shutdown point. The XBOX 360 for example had the RROD where the constant heat made the solder joints fail (I know the 360 is different but the heat point stands)
scy1192 said:
Stuck my phone in the freezer for a few minutes, took it out, and ran the stability test in AnTuTu which plots the temperature and a benchmark score. Looks like it starts right around 34 degrees (93 Fahrenheit), which really isn't that warm at all. You could get that just browsing around and holding it in your hand.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The 34 in this case is temp or battery, not SoC. The SoC is probably hit 75 Celcius and that's why CPU throttles. Try HWBot bench instead, it shows not battery but CPU temp. You will see that CPU immediately hits 75°
---------- Post added at 07:53 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:49 PM ----------
Enddo said:
Wouldn't the hardware still have a thermal cut off point where it will just shut down the phone if it gets too hot? It's to my understanding that this hardware shut off point is different than the software thermal throttling. If anything, I think it will just make your device get too hot for comfort than do any real hardware damage to it.
I'm just throwing an educated guess out there though, I honestly have no real proof one way or the other.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Afaik they shut down itself if battery hits 60°C or CPU burns to smthn like 105C
HWBot runs parallel... If you want to see your CPU get really hot press the button multiple times. Phone melted!
Why does the snapdragon get so hot. I don't understand what's the point of a fast chip in these phones if they can't run on there maximum lol.... Maybe that's why Intel is gonna take over qualcom one day.
Sent from LG Gangster 3
helikido said:
Why does the snapdragon get so hot. I don't understand what's the point of a fast chip in these phones if they can't run on there maximum lol.... Maybe that's why Intel is gonna take over qualcom one day.
Sent from LG Gangster 3
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It runs hotter because its having to produce all the pixels for the QHD. The same chip in other 1080 phones doesn't run as hot. At times doing normal things like browsing and Facebook etc my phone has throttled down to 1.4Ghz max and the CPU temp is up at 65-70deg C. That's pretty hot.
androiduser991 said:
It runs hotter because its having to produce all the pixels for the QHD. The same chip in other 1080 phones doesn't run as hot. At times doing normal things like browsing and Facebook etc my phone has throttled down to 1.4Ghz max and the CPU temp is up at 65-70deg C. That's pretty hot.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Its not the only phone. And mine never throttles that low doing normal tasks. It doesn't even throttle at all. However, when playing games or running demanding apps it does throttle.
Also, its not the only phone that runs this hot. All other phones will get hot and throttle just as much when running equally demanding stuff.
So the question was, what's the point of super fast chips when they are going to throttle themselves so fast?
Sent from LG Gangster 3
helikido said:
Its not the only phone. And mine never throttles that low doing normal tasks. It doesn't even throttle at all. However, when playing games or running demanding apps it does throttle.
Also, its not the only phone that runs this hot. All other phones will get hot and throttle just as much when running equally demanding stuff.
So the question was, what's the point of super fast chips when they are going to throttle themselves so fast?
Sent from LG Gangster 3
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'd recommend that you do a bit of testing,run some apps for 5-10 min then open up a CPU frequency app. The frequency will be be at a low maximum and the temp high. The GPU also throttles, open an app like Faux clock after running some apps and the max GPU value has decreased. Without a doubt the extra pixels are causing this as the SOC is having to work harder to produce them. Its simple physics.B
But anyway, its a specs game. People want faster and better so that's why the SOCs get faster and faster even if they're throttling.
androiduser991 said:
I'd recommend that you do a bit of testing,run some apps for 5-10 min then open up a CPU frequency app. The frequency will be be at a low maximum and the temp high. The GPU also throttles, open an app like Faux clock after running some apps and the max GPU value has decreased. Without a doubt the extra pixels are causing this as the SOC is having to work harder to produce them. Its simple physics.B
But anyway, its a specs game. People want faster and better so that's why the SOCs get faster and faster even if they're throttling.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The soc is working harder, but like I just said the how soc is still hot even on other phones man.
Run the dead trigger on the s5 and the g3. They both most likely throttle down to the same limit while the fps on the G3 might be a little lower due to the resolution.
But like I just said, what's the point when the damn thing will burn. There is no point in 2.5ghz when your phone can't run at that frequency more than 5 seconds lol.
I remember when I used to run my Galaxy S One full speed. Not one but of throttling. These CPUs have not gotten any more efficient thermal wise.
Sent from LG Gangster 3
helikido said:
The soc is working harder, but like I just said the how soc is still hot even on other phones man.
Run the dead trigger on the s5 and the g3. They both most likely throttle down to the same limit while the fps on the G3 might be a little lower due to the resolution.
But like I just said, what's the point when the damn thing will burn. There is no point in 2.5ghz when your phone can't run at that frequency more than 5 seconds lol.
I remember when I used to run my Galaxy S One full speed. Not one but of throttling. These CPUs have not gotten any more efficient thermal wise.
Sent from LG Gangster 3
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, I agree there's not much point in having a super fast chip when it throttles so much. Again, people want bigger faster and better and most users wont even know about thermal throtlling.It does seem to be bad on the G3 though. I think I saw another thread that said LG don't use a proper thermal pad also. Don't know about that but to run a 1080 phone with the same chip as a 2k phone then you'll have thermal and performance issues on the 2k Vs the 1080.
androiduser991 said:
Yeah, I agree there's not much point in having a super fast chip when it throttles so much. Again, people want bigger faster and better and most users wont even know about thermal throtlling.It does seem to be bad on the G3 though. I think I saw another thread that said LG don't use a proper thermal pad also. Don't know about that but to run a 1080 phone with the same chip as a 2k phone then you'll have thermal and performance issues on the 2k Vs the 1080.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The 801 is more than capable of driving a QHD phone. The 800 series are basically created to support up to 4k. And how will give the same performance as a 800 while on QHD. Its not even close to being a big deal. And yeah I saw that same thread. I wonder if it's true.
Sent from LG Gangster 3
androiduser991 said:
It runs hotter because its having to produce all the pixels for the QHD. The same chip in other 1080 phones doesn't run as hot. At times doing normal things like browsing and Facebook etc my phone has throttled down to 1.4Ghz max and the CPU temp is up at 65-70deg C. That's pretty hot.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's not totally true, every Note 3 and S5 I tried ran hotter than this G3.
Sent from my LG-D851 using Tapatalk
I see that the layered CPU/memory unit has a metal cover to it, im wondering if a thin thermal pad could be placed between them to conduct heat to the metal cover. Its not much of a heatsink, but it might help a little bit. It may even be possible to put a thin copper sheet on the metal cover to move heat away. It all depends how much room there is under the plastic cover. The only teardown ive seen doesnt make it very clear.
ChrisM75 said:
I see that the layered CPU/memory unit has a metal cover to it, im wondering if a thin thermal pad could be placed between them to conduct heat to the metal cover. Its not much of a heatsink, but it might help a little bit. It may even be possible to put a thin copper sheet on the metal cover to move heat away. It all depends how much room there is under the plastic cover. The only teardown ive seen doesnt make it very clear.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It could possibly cause other issues with other components due to heat transfer?
ChrisM75 said:
I see that the layered CPU/memory unit has a metal cover to it, im wondering if a thin thermal pad could be placed between them to conduct heat to the metal cover. Its not much of a heatsink, but it might help a little bit. It may even be possible to put a thin copper sheet on the metal cover to move heat away. It all depends how much room there is under the plastic cover. The only teardown ive seen doesnt make it very clear.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Suggest you to read this http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2730641
---------- Post added at 06:13 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:11 PM ----------
Skizzy034 said:
That's not totally true, every Note 3 and S5 I tried ran hotter than this G3.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

Overheating

Howdy.
I noticed that my G2 likes to overheat when playing very graphically intensive games like Lego star wars collection.
Light games like subway surfers and others don't cause any heat at all but those that require max possible power out of the CPU/GPU do, is this normal?
It's not something like warm, it actually gets really hot like after 10-20 minutes of playing. Uncomfortable to hold.
It gets so hot that I cannot even increase the display brightness, it says the phone is too hot.
I'm on stock Kitkat 4.4.2 (D80220H).
More power more heat...
Dorimanx kernel use different termal control and optimized settings, you can try it.
But the computation power you use, the more hot became the cpu.
_____________________________________Read more write less and be smart
siggey said:
More power more heat...
Dorimanx kernel use different termal control and optimized settings, you can try it.
But the computation power you use, the more hot became the cpu.
_____________________________________Read more write less and be smart
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks, captain, I didn't know that temperature increases when CPU/GPU workload is increased..
I asked if it's normal FOR THIS PHONE to overheat this much. Not if it's normal for the phone to heat up at all.
Going to download CPU-Z to check the thermals after a game session.
Edit: After ~15 minutes thermals show ~70 degrees on all 10 sensors.
I explained you cause and solution. This is a phone and not a playstation (and even the playstation had his own termal problem).
_____________________________________Read more write less and be smart

Categories

Resources