How Hot is too Hot? Temperatures and Thermal Results

In a normal desktop computer, the goal is to complete the set of instructions the fastest and be able to dissipate the energy. With a mobile device however, where energy consumption as well as heat dissipation are both factors, it is no longer simply a race to complete the task the fastest, due to the fact that the efficiency of the task also comes in to play. There are some items that can be worked on over time at a more efficient performance per watt ratio, and not everything has to be done at lightning speed. There still comes a time when a program needs responsiveness, and the system is happy to pay an efficiency penalty in order to do so (lower performance/watt, but faster to react). With longer or sustained workloads, dealing with the excess energy lost as heat becomes a big factor, and there are many ways to deal with it.

Some systems are big, metallic, heavy and can dissipate a lot of heat. Some are plastic and fanless, and get warm very quickly. As we saw in our ‘OEM Dilemma’ piece with Core M in 2015, even with the best processor you can buy with an unlimited budget, if it doesn’t have the heat dissipation characteristics (or design), it will perform very badly. Not only does the OEM have to decide how good/expensive that has to be, but other factors such as processor temperature and skin temperature influence where the thermal ceiling is, because if the system hits the ceiling then it has to reduce both frequency and voltage (DVFS, dynamic voltage/frequency scaling) to reduce power output. This reduces performance as well, and can cause the system to have bad results. Some systems can be quite strict with DVFS, going low at the first sign of trouble, whereas others will try and hover around the skin temperature.

So the key metrics are:

  • Skin Temperature Limit, set by OEM mainly for comfort
  • Heat dissipation design and characteristics, i.e. plastic or metallic
  • How aggressive the DVFS system is.

A Quick Look at Rocket League

As part of our testing, we were able to use a FLIR thermal camera for a couple of days and take some recordings. For this, I chose to up end the laptop and face the camera on the bottom of each laptop. With this in place, I ran our Rocket League benchmark which has a variable CPU/GPU workload and is indicative of how a system with a good integrated graphics solution might be used. The videos are below, with the temperature scale in each set from 20 C to 55 C:





Out of the videos, I took two sets of images – one after 10 minutes, and one at the end showing the hot spots.  Starting with the final shots, we had the following:

 
HP Elitebook 745 G2 and HP Elitebook 745 G3

If we take the two HP Elitebook 745s, with the G2 (Kaveri) on the left and the G3 (Carrizo) on the right, the hotspot for both was the vent on the left hand side. As we can see, the G2 part (either by virtue of firmware or the extra 4W in TDP) gives 51ºC compared to 46ºC in the G3. It is also fairly clear that the G2 temperature hotspot is highly spread across the region, whereas the G3’s is more localized.

  
HP Pavilion, Toshiba Satellite and Lenovo Y700

From left to right, here we have the HP Pavilion, Toshiba Satellite and the Lenovo Y700. Both the Pavilion and the Toshiba are between 49-51ºC with the temperature spreading out from the exhaust. Arguably the vent in the Toshiba model is producing a more uncomfortable scenario here. On the far right is the Lenovo Y700, and by virtue of being built to dissipate a 35W APU and similar TDP external graphics card, it barely gets warm at the worst vent. This is shown in the 10 minute shots:

  
HP Pavilion, Toshiba Satellite and Lenovo Y700

Again, left to right is the HP Pavilion, Toshiba Satellite and the Lenovo Y700. For the Lenovo, this shot is actually taken at 15 minutes and you can barely see much above room temperature. The HP Pavilion on the left has two very localized spots, showing the two vents, and the middle Toshiba has very good or poor heat management, depending on how you look at it. The excess heat is definitely finding its way around a large portion of the base of the laptop, which is good to prevent heat soak, but the problem is that the laptop design doesn’t seem to be getting rid of it like the other two devices. This is perhaps where having a slightly louder but more powerful fan could help, compared to one that won’t push as much air through the device.

 
HP Elitebook 745 G2 and HP Elitebook 745 G3

If we go back to the HP Elitebooks (G2 with Kaveri on the left, G3 with Carrizo on the right) we can see a similar situation at the 10 minute mark. The G2 Kaveri system is experiencing a lot of heat soak around the vents, spreading around the bottom of the laptop. The Carrizo system by comparison is on the same road, but much further back. The vents are clearly where the temperature rises the most, which might make it uncomfortable to use, but the Carrizo is certainly doing a better job here.

That’s all well and good for temperature we might feel with the device on the lap, the limiting factor to performance is when we hit that temperature ceiling. We profiled several benchmarks and their temperature characteristics for each of the laptops.

#1: The HP Elitebook 745 G2 (Kaveri, A10 PRO-7350B, 19W)

From the results, it would seem that the G2 has two different temperature modes. In a mode that requires the processing power but is perhaps a trivial set of calculations, the system will set a 60ºC limit:

 

But when the calculations get more complex and vectorizable, for example transcoding video or ray-tracing, the limit will be raised nearer 70ºC

 

Even with these limits, in each situation it seems the temperature is actually achieved very quickly, perhaps due to the heat soak as seen in the images above.

#2: The HP Elitebook 745 G3 (Carrizo, PRO A12-8800B, 15W)

While the G3 has an identical design to the G2, we saw above that the Carrizo would seem to have less of an issue with thermal throttling if all was equal. By our results, the footing does seem equal more or less, but the G3 actually seems to have more stringent requirements as to what constitutes as ‘heavy and complex’ to open up the limit beyond 60ºC. So we end up with great graphics like these showing where the temperature limit is kicking in either once with POV-Ray or repeatedly in 3DPM:

 

But hand it over to PCMark08 and it seems to be all over the place:

 

With PCMark08 there does seem to be an aim for 55C, but at certain points the system is happy to let the heat soak a little bit before kicking in either the fans or a lower DVFS setting.

#3: The Toshiba Satellite E45DW-C4210 (Carrizo, FX-8800P, 15W)

Based on previous experiences with Toshiba devices, you would forgive me for expecting there to be some issues when it came to temperature related worries. The thermal images above, showing heat soak over the rear of the device, was also poignant. Nonetheless, the figures do the talking, and it turns out that the Toshiba is very aggressive when it comes to temperature limits. There seems to be a blanket 60ºC temperature limit in almost all situations:

 

There are many occasions when the thermal limit will kick off and a program will let the system rise up a few degrees (particularly in bursty loads) but the system very quickly engages back to get to 60ºC. The only problem the Toshiba has is that the system already seems to be hovering around that temperature before work starts, which might explain why the high frequency modes rarely kick in:

 

#4: The HP Pavilion 17z-g100 (Carrizo, A10-8700P, 15W)

The HP Pavilion takes the medal for being the biggest device out of the bunch with the lowest frequency Carrizo APU, which usually makes for a good combination of more turbo modes more often without the need to throttle. However, looking at the results, this is far from the case.

The HP Pavilion is actually more restrictive than the previous three already described – no matter what the benchmark, the limit seems to be 55ºC with next to zero ifs or buts.

 

Even POV-Ray and PCMark08 get struck down immediately or barely even get to 55ºC in the first place. If we look at the frequency histograms, this shows a lot – the Pavilion is rated for a turbo mode of 3.2 GHz, but you would be lucky to even catch a glimmer beyond PCMark08:

  

All the other benchmarks essentially have 2300 MHz as their regular frequency and mostly clock down to 2100 MHz in temperature dependent situations. This is an odd one – the only compensation one would get out of this is extended battery life (while work isn’t being done) and a less uncomfortable lap (if you happen to be using a 17-inch device on your lap).

#5: The Lenovo Y700 (Carrizo, FX-8800P, 35W) + R9 385MX

Despite the Lenovo being the most powerful and power hungry system here, it probably has the easiest ride on paper. The system design has to be able to get rid of heat when both the APU and GPU are running full steam, which is arguably up to 100W of cooling power. So putting the system through a few tests should be easy enough to invoke the highest frequencies, right?

In practically every benchmark, the system hummed along at 3400 MHz, the top turbo mode. This gives obvious advantages for benchmarking for sure. In most situations the temperature feels unrestrained in the easier benchmarks:

 

But in PCMark08, it does seem to jump around a fair bit. This means we get a small amount of lower frequencies:

 

However it is actually the WinRAR test that has most concern. The system keeps the temperature low, pretty much below 40 all the time. This opens up a lot of lower frequencies as a result. Part of this might be to do with memory accesses, as WinRAR is a heavy test on the memory bandwidth.

 

Comparing AMD Carrizo to Intel Core Power Consumption: Big Improvements to Video Playback
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  • Squinoogle - Saturday, February 27, 2016 - link

    An interesting read. I'll say I'm glad you went to the bother even if the ends weren't quite what you were expecting from the outset.

    I agree that it would be quite interesting to see someone make a proper halo device to showcase Carrizo at its best, rather than the trend of taking an established Intel chassis and then stuffing a hobbled AMD configuration inside it.

    Speaking of which, I had a look at the HP UK website since I remembered seeing exactly that situation in the past (was an Envy 15 model that time) and came across an interesting trio of devices:

    Three models from the Pavilion Black Edition range, all three using the same chassis and internal components, the only difference being the wifi card on the A10 model is upgraded.

    http://store.hp.com/UKStore/Merch/Product.aspx?id=... - Core i3-6100U £459
    http://store.hp.com/UKStore/Merch/Product.aspx?id=... - A10-8780P + R7 M360 £529
    http://store.hp.com/UKStore/Merch/Product.aspx?id=... - Core i5-6200U £549

    I'd be interested in seeing a true apples-to-apples comparison between devices like these, where the Intel and AMD models are priced and specified so closely together.
  • Gc - Sunday, February 28, 2016 - link

    Another Carrizo 'capability' not implemented:
    Carrizo was advertised as the first architecture to support full HSA 1.0, but ...
    Can any retail Carrizo systems run HSA?

    As I understand, to run HSA currently requires installing Linux and the HSA driver.
    (Possible running the HSA Docker container on this host, but the host must have the HSA driver.)
    https://github.com/HSAFoundation/HSA-Docs-AMD/wiki...
    https://github.com/HSAFoundation/HSA-Drivers-Linux...
    The only test system listed is a "A88X-PRO" desktop motherboard and Kaveri "A10-7850K" APU.
    (No Carrizo chips are available for that socket.)
    The host must have "the IOMMU enabled in the BIOS".

    This is the IOMMU of the GPU, typically under Graphics Configuration in the BIOS.
    https://community.amd.com/thread/169962

    However, I have not seen any retail Carrizo systems that implement that BIOS option. Do they exist? (The closest thing is the option to enable AMD-V as required for Docker, but that is not the same thing, as the above link indicates.)

    If not, why not? (Is an effort/investment needed to get the support into common AMD chip BIOS/UEFIs used by ODMs, similar like it was needed to get support into the Linux kernel?)
  • albert89 - Wednesday, March 23, 2016 - link

    Although I congratulate Anandtech after repeated demands from consumers like myself as to why a review of Carrizo wasn't done sooner the result is a review that leaves one ask many questions and a demand for another review since new info has come to light.
    So redo the whole review under dual channel conditions for AMD's Carrizo. Otherwise you'll be leaving this review incomplete and short changing a competitor of Intel leaving us to wonder how bias Anandtech is towards AMD !
  • DJ Dave - Saturday, March 25, 2017 - link

    hey.i just bought this as a refurb. it seems to lag/stutter with certain programs. Mine has 2 ram slots with 4gb in each..does anyone know if that can be upgraded?
  • krissh6563 - Sunday, August 9, 2020 - link

    Sir I have Hp Elite-book 745 G2 laptop. Now I am facing overheating problem in my laptop. So what should I do.

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