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LeftInTX

(29,989 posts)
Sun Nov 10, 2019, 12:19 AM Nov 2019

I took my HP Windows 10 Desktop to the shop:

Cuz I got a BIOS warning on my CPU fan.

They replaced the fan.
The guy told my hubby that only 2 out of 16 of my CPU's were turned on!!!

The guy said that they frequently do this, so you will buy a new computer much sooner than you need one again!!

WTF???

(My computer is only 2 years old)

Wondering if you can determine this by looking at the settings?
Can you turn on the CPU's via the BIOS?


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canetoad

(18,119 posts)
1. They would have meant cores
Sun Nov 10, 2019, 12:40 AM
Nov 2019

Not CPUs.

Are you sure you have a 16 core CPU? That's an amazingly high-end machine. HP do produce some of these 16 core workstations; out of interest I'd love to see the specs of your machine.

Here's how you find out:

1. Right click on the taskbar and select Task Manager
2. Go to the 'Performance' tab
3. Underneath the CPU graph, there is text that reads Utilization, Speed
4. In the second column the first entry is 'Base Speed' the second entry is 'Cores'

That will tell you if you have a 16 core processor. (eg. I have 6 cores)

If you don't have a 16 core processor, they are talking shit.


canetoad

(18,119 posts)
6. Specs - nice machine!
Sun Nov 10, 2019, 03:30 AM
Nov 2019

But if you are using Win 10, all the CPU cores will be enabled by default - the operating system is configured to use ALL cores as long as the program has the ability to utilize them.

Voltaire2

(14,700 posts)
8. Uh yeah so your shop guy was wrong to start with.
Sun Nov 10, 2019, 09:14 AM
Nov 2019

Your pc has 8 ‘cpus’ (2 threads per core) not 16.

As others have noted, you can view the individual cpus in the task manager.

HP is not turning cores off. That would not go unnoticed and lawyers would be salivating over the class action suit.

BootinUp

(49,020 posts)
2. you can view individual cpu utilization
Sun Nov 10, 2019, 12:41 AM
Nov 2019

With windows built in resource monitor app. Or there is downloadable app/utility called process explorer that’s pretty good.

OnDoutside

(20,656 posts)
3. I would have thought that the lower the processing, the lower the
Sun Nov 10, 2019, 03:06 AM
Nov 2019

Need for cooling via the fan, and vice versa ?

LeftInTX

(29,989 posts)
5. Fan was malfunctioning (or not working) and computer would not boot into Windows
Sun Nov 10, 2019, 03:11 AM
Nov 2019

The BIOS detected it.

OnDoutside

(20,656 posts)
7. One of my previous laptops was a Toshiba, and I discovered it
Sun Nov 10, 2019, 03:35 AM
Nov 2019

had a design fault where the opening at the side wasn't wide enough to let the hot air escape. It also caused a build-up of dust on the fan, which over time caused the temperature of laptop to go through the roof, triggering a machine shutdown. Every month or so I had to take the fan out and clean it.

mudpuddle

(43 posts)
9. Heat causes the processor to "throttle" and reduce the active cores.
Thu Nov 14, 2019, 01:36 PM
Nov 2019

I had a heat sink rivet that was loose and caused the same problem because the heat sink was not flat against the processor. I removed the heat sink, removed the dried thermal paste, applied new thermal paste, reinstalled the heat sink.

You can install CPU-Z (freeware) to see how many cores are active.

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