How to Change System Cooling Policy in Windows 11/10 [Guide]
How to Change System Cooling Policy in Windows 11/10 [Guide]
Option missing solution: https://youtu.be/FRnq2OKwtzM
Be it a Desktop or Laptop, it’s important to conserve power. One of the ways it can be done is by using the System Cooling Policy. Since Desktops are always plugged in, it becomes even necessary to save power when you are running on battery. That’s where the System Cooling Policy for Processor comes into play. Windows 11/10 offers two types of cooling policy— Passive and Active. In this tutorial, we will share how you can change System Cooling Policy for Processor from Passive to Active or vice versa.
Whether you have a desktop or a laptop, it’s important to conserve power. One of the ways it can be done is by using the System Cooling Policy. Since Desktops are always plugged in, it becomes even necessary to save power when you are running on battery. That’s where the System Cooling Policy for Processor comes into play. Windows 11/10 offers two types of cooling policy— Passive and Active. In this tutorial, we will share how you can change System Cooling Policy for Processor from Passive to Active or vice versa.
Issues addressed in this tutorial:
how to change system cooling policy windows 11
how to change system cooling policy windows 10
what is system cooling policy
system cooling policy for gaming
add system cooling policy
system cooling policy windows 10
system cooling policy missing in power options
In Windows 10 and Windows 11, you can specify the System cooling policy setting for active or passive cooling. Starting with Windows 8, devices that have thermal management capabilities can expose these capabilities to the operating system with a special driver. A driver that has passive-cooling capabilities implements the PassiveCooling routine. A driver that has active-cooling capabilities implements the ActiveCooling routine. In response to changes in computer usage or environmental conditions, the operating system calls one (or possibly both) of these routines to manage thermal levels dynamically in the hardware platform.
This tutorial will apply for computers, laptops, desktops, and tablets running the Windows 10 and Windows 11 operating systems (Home, Professional, Enterprise, Education) from all supported hardware manufactures, like Dell, HP, Acer, Asus, Toshiba, Lenovo, Alienware, Razer, MSI, Huawei , Microsoft Surface, and Samsung.