Low noise gaming laptop?
- duncan_101
- Posts: 424
- Joined: Sat Jan 19, 2019 1:33 pm
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
Ich schaue auch hier als Referenz und was den PC-Bau angeht, schaue ich immer auf newegg.
Referenz: https://www.one.de/
Referenz: https://www.newegg.com/
Referenz: https://www.one.de/
Referenz: https://www.newegg.com/
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
English please. (As this is the English section)EmmaBeck wrote: ↑Tue Mar 02, 2021 1:40 am Ich schaue auch hier als Referenz und was den PC-Bau angeht, schaue ich immer auf newegg.
Referenz: https://www.one.de/
Referenz: https://www.newegg.com/
FS15 & FS19 Platinum Edition PC (and War Thunder, Gaijin is way worse than GIANTS ever has been accused of being)
FS Comunity Trader: https://fs19communitytrader.freeforums.net/
Desktop: i5-9400f, RTX 2060, 8gb RAM, 256gb SSD.
Laptop: Pentium Silver N5000, UHD605, 4gb RAM, 1tb HDD.
Deere, Fendt, Claas, and sometimes the rest of Agco.
FS Comunity Trader: https://fs19communitytrader.freeforums.net/
Desktop: i5-9400f, RTX 2060, 8gb RAM, 256gb SSD.
Laptop: Pentium Silver N5000, UHD605, 4gb RAM, 1tb HDD.
Deere, Fendt, Claas, and sometimes the rest of Agco.
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
My bad, I forgot.. my go to stop would be on one.de and whenever I try to look and build my pc newegg is a decent option for me.
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
FS15 & FS19 Platinum Edition PC (and War Thunder, Gaijin is way worse than GIANTS ever has been accused of being)
FS Comunity Trader: https://fs19communitytrader.freeforums.net/
Desktop: i5-9400f, RTX 2060, 8gb RAM, 256gb SSD.
Laptop: Pentium Silver N5000, UHD605, 4gb RAM, 1tb HDD.
Deere, Fendt, Claas, and sometimes the rest of Agco.
FS Comunity Trader: https://fs19communitytrader.freeforums.net/
Desktop: i5-9400f, RTX 2060, 8gb RAM, 256gb SSD.
Laptop: Pentium Silver N5000, UHD605, 4gb RAM, 1tb HDD.
Deere, Fendt, Claas, and sometimes the rest of Agco.
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
If you set a goal, then everything is real. If you don't have enough money to buy the desired computer right away, buy it in parts. First one thing, then another. So you will assemble a new system unit.
- duncan_101
- Posts: 424
- Joined: Sat Jan 19, 2019 1:33 pm
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
That is kinda difficult with a laptop
Happly farming in Fryslan.
On an Asus RoG laptop.
On an Asus RoG laptop.
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
Other than the one Alienware which uses desktop components... and is $$$
FS15 & FS19 Platinum Edition PC (and War Thunder, Gaijin is way worse than GIANTS ever has been accused of being)
FS Comunity Trader: https://fs19communitytrader.freeforums.net/
Desktop: i5-9400f, RTX 2060, 8gb RAM, 256gb SSD.
Laptop: Pentium Silver N5000, UHD605, 4gb RAM, 1tb HDD.
Deere, Fendt, Claas, and sometimes the rest of Agco.
FS Comunity Trader: https://fs19communitytrader.freeforums.net/
Desktop: i5-9400f, RTX 2060, 8gb RAM, 256gb SSD.
Laptop: Pentium Silver N5000, UHD605, 4gb RAM, 1tb HDD.
Deere, Fendt, Claas, and sometimes the rest of Agco.
- duncan_101
- Posts: 424
- Joined: Sat Jan 19, 2019 1:33 pm
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
Fair enough... Didn't know that.
Happly farming in Fryslan.
On an Asus RoG laptop.
On an Asus RoG laptop.
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
Depends on the budget. For a decent amount, you can take a virtually silent laptop. Although, as for me, it is much easier to assemble a silent system unit for a stationary computer.
- duncan_101
- Posts: 424
- Joined: Sat Jan 19, 2019 1:33 pm
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
Yes but that wasn't the question from the first poster...
Happly farming in Fryslan.
On an Asus RoG laptop.
On an Asus RoG laptop.
-
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Sun May 30, 2021 8:59 pm
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
Razer blade pro 17 is most quiet gaming laptop that l have found that is still powerful enough
- Questionnaire
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Jan 12, 2017 4:51 pm
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
I have the Razer Blade Advanced from 2019 and can agree that Razer is great at making laptops, if you want something low profile and keeps stylish looking professional and fits in with other laptops (unlike some other "gaming-focused" laptops with over the top looks) while having the power to separate it from other "normal-looking" laptops. If you are going for quiet, the overall speed of the laptop also matters as the fans will pick up the more load the laptop has, so you may have to lower settings to get to a noise level you are comfortable with (this is with all laptops not just Razer Blades).colekayley wrote: ↑Mon May 31, 2021 12:22 pm Razer blade pro 17 is most quiet gaming laptop that l have found that is still powerful enough
Playing FS 15-17-19-22 on a Razer Blade.
PC Specs
AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D
AMD Radeon RX 590 "Fatboy"
Corsair Vengance RGB Pro 32 GB (4 x 8) DDR4-3200
Gigabyte B450 AORUS M Micro ATX AM4 Motherboard
Samsung 870 QVO Plus 1TB
Samsung 970 Evo Plus 2TB M.2
In-game username:Questionnaire
Discord: russian_man_99
PC Specs
AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D
AMD Radeon RX 590 "Fatboy"
Corsair Vengance RGB Pro 32 GB (4 x 8) DDR4-3200
Gigabyte B450 AORUS M Micro ATX AM4 Motherboard
Samsung 870 QVO Plus 1TB
Samsung 970 Evo Plus 2TB M.2
In-game username:Questionnaire
Discord: russian_man_99
- Patton_M47
- Posts: 921
- Joined: Sun Jan 12, 2020 11:33 pm
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
cr@p*y Laptop go Vrooom
I do FS19 old school mods and FS19 military mods for PC let me know if you want anything done
I don't have any form of social media nor discord FYI
Ban time total: 7 days
AKA Oberfeldwebel Patton
I don't have any form of social media nor discord FYI
Ban time total: 7 days
AKA Oberfeldwebel Patton
Re: Low noise gaming laptop?
One suggestion I would make is to undervolt your CPU with a program or if possible in BIOS, to eliminate thermal throttling.
I'm using Throttlestop to keep my temperatures in check.
It's quite usual for laptop CPUs to have a higher voltage setting to promote headroom for stability, and often one can optimize settings to make the laptop to run with lower temperatures and the of course a bit lower fan noise.
Most noise will still come from the GPU when gaming, but it's at least something.
Also when avoiding thermal throttling also result in a more stable performance, sure, you probably have to lower clock speeds a bit and maybe loose some top FPS but gain a bit in average performance.
So instead of getting top FPS of 120 and throttling down to 75 when temperatures are too high you'll get an even 100 FPS.
These numbers are of course just to get my point across.
I have a Lenovo legion y540 rtx2060 and through extensive testing and benchmarking i got about 2% top performance loss, but average benchmark results increase about 5%
So the performance change are not earth shattering but my laptop is now quite a lot quieter.
Also depending on hardware setup in the laptop, using a external monitor can increase performance.
For me running I external monitor gave me on average 10 frame increase in benchmarks and games, but more importantly than that it gave me the option to use FreeSync that wasn't available for the internal monitor.
It have to do with signal routing, on my laptop I bypass the bottlenecking intel graphics chip and the monitor running directly from the dedicated GPU. But this differ from laptop to laptop.
This is of course depending on what laptop you're using, these examples are from my own experience with my laptop.
Search for information about it, there's a lot of information in the gaming community about how to optimize laptops for gaming, so read up about it around the web and you'll sure to find help with the specific laptop you're using.
I'm using Throttlestop to keep my temperatures in check.
It's quite usual for laptop CPUs to have a higher voltage setting to promote headroom for stability, and often one can optimize settings to make the laptop to run with lower temperatures and the of course a bit lower fan noise.
Most noise will still come from the GPU when gaming, but it's at least something.
Also when avoiding thermal throttling also result in a more stable performance, sure, you probably have to lower clock speeds a bit and maybe loose some top FPS but gain a bit in average performance.
So instead of getting top FPS of 120 and throttling down to 75 when temperatures are too high you'll get an even 100 FPS.
These numbers are of course just to get my point across.
I have a Lenovo legion y540 rtx2060 and through extensive testing and benchmarking i got about 2% top performance loss, but average benchmark results increase about 5%
So the performance change are not earth shattering but my laptop is now quite a lot quieter.
Also depending on hardware setup in the laptop, using a external monitor can increase performance.
For me running I external monitor gave me on average 10 frame increase in benchmarks and games, but more importantly than that it gave me the option to use FreeSync that wasn't available for the internal monitor.
It have to do with signal routing, on my laptop I bypass the bottlenecking intel graphics chip and the monitor running directly from the dedicated GPU. But this differ from laptop to laptop.
This is of course depending on what laptop you're using, these examples are from my own experience with my laptop.
Search for information about it, there's a lot of information in the gaming community about how to optimize laptops for gaming, so read up about it around the web and you'll sure to find help with the specific laptop you're using.