
In any case, I used speed fan to detect the temps and it turned out to be more like 40C just after booting and 90C during intensive gaming/stress testing, which is still a little on the toasty side, but not too bad considering I was stressing it out by playing skyrim with 2x AA at 1080p.īy the way, if anyone does have this laptop, games don't work well in full screen for some reason. So you were definitely on to something when you said you thought your sensors were broken. I've recently bought a HP Envy 15 (j151-sa, running an AMD A10 in dual graphics with a Radeon HD 8650M) and the temperatures were running ridiculously hot on it according to HW Monitor and Speccy (around 80 just after boot, 130 while gaming), but it turns out that those programs were just reporting the wrong temperature. Hey, I know this thread is months old now but I thought I'd post an answer for anyone trying to solve a similar problem who stumbled across this page (like I did). Many thanks in advance for any help, let me know if you need more info/specs I'm switching to recommended when I stop gaming but this only causes te cpu to drop a few degrees, like to 82C.Ģ.1Ghz quad AMD A8 accelerated to 3Ghz max.


I've set up optimal power plans in control panel, 100%cpu and cooling for 'Performance' and 60%cpu and 100%cooling for 'Recommended' scheme. Speedfan doesn't recognize my fans so this option doesn't apply. Other options like fan-voltage control are not available in my BIOS.

I've already set the 'Fan always on' option enabled in BIOS, but I want it to always run on full speed, noise doesn't matter. I'm using my HP Pavilion 17 e072nr laptop for about 3 months now so dust couldn't be really the problem.

I know AMD cpu's are known to run on hight temps but this is just too hot for me, I don't want to get my hands and cpu burned while gaming. I regularly use my laptop for gaming, causing it to become really hot, mostly around temps of 90-100C. I'm searching for software which can be used to (quickly) change your CPU/fan speed.
