CPU or software malfunctioning

I have a 2019 mac book pro 16 having a core i9 amd radeon pro5500m 4gb 16gb ram and 1TB ssd. Basically the problem is that when I run resource intensive tasks my mac cpu turbo boosts upto 3.9 and 4.6Ghz depending on the task until the tmps go up to 90. But even when they die down to like 3.3 or lower, but even when the temps go down to 80 or 70 Celsius it doesn't go up in fact it slowly still goes down until it hits 1.1 or 1.2 Ghz and stays there until I stop running those resource intensive tasks. Can someone please explain why this is happening and how to fix it. This didn't use to be a problem for like the first year or so of owning this computer.

MacBook Pro 16″, macOS 13.3

Posted on Apr 23, 2023 9:08 AM

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Posted on Apr 28, 2023 10:49 AM

16-in 2019 intel MacBook Pro heat and performance:

This computer was built with a ninth generation 14nm Intel processor. The only way to meet the target performance was to make it a six or eight core processor. This processor generates an enormous burst of heat when it does Turbo Boost, and there is only one cooling rail shared by both the CPU and GPU. So getting Either side too hot ramps up the fans.


This processor was supposed to be an eleventh-generation 7nm processor, but intel was three years late, and started to ship its tenth generation 10nm processors much later.


The drive in this computer is more than 100 times the typical speed of drives in computers a decade older. If you have installed software that wastes computer resources on a regular basis, such as third-party Virus Scanners, speeder-uppers, Cleaner-uppers/Removers, Optimizers, third-party file Sync-ers such as DropBox, BackBlaze, OneDrive, or GoogleDrive, or a VPN that you installed yourself, it will do busywork at previously-impossible speeds and causing seemingly-random panics, typically for access violations or page faults. — heating up at a ferocious rate.


This older junky software used to run as fast as it could, then would then have to suspend itself to wait for the disk drive to catch up before continuing to waste resources. With a really fast drive, that drive-speed restriction is gone. In many cases it still does not show up as using a lot of CPU, because it is doing a lot of intensive I/O, and not a lot of computing. That will still make your computer slow and heat up.


Apple DID redesign the cooling system for this specific Mac. New, high-efficiency fans are used. But for some uses, that is still not enough.


Some of the best practical advice is to install Turbo Boost Switcher and turn off CPU Turbo Boost. This reduces the huge sudden overheating brought on by Turbo Boost, that simply does not translate into real-world performance gains.


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CPU or software malfunctioning

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