I have a PC and a notebook my notebook is a year old and my pc is not even 1 month old and in fortnite i have more on the notebook with full epic graphics 66fps and on the pc 55-59
Why do I have more fps on the notebook if I have a 1050ti on both and have the i7-8700 on the pc and the i7-8750h on the notebook?
I guess you have a higher screen resolution on the PC than on the laptop, it needs more power.
Should not be so because your notebook is slower in every way.
Maybe different attitude, different resolution etc.
No Other settings are the same
Then I can't explain that unfortunately. Maybe on the PC VSync is enabled on 60FPS?
Ne have 144hz monitor
That may be true, but it could be set somewhere wrong frequency. 59FPS are at least noisy.
No, the same
What the same?
Yes, but when I go to heaven, for example, I have 144 fps
The same resolution
Ah yes, then the hypothesis was probably wrong and I can't explain your observations unfortunately.
Compare times the respective clock rates of your GTX 1050Ti in the PC and in the notebook under load with each other.
Possibly. Clock the 1050Ti in your book a bit higher than the card in your PC.
Yes, they clock higher in the notebook, I just checked actually they should clock down my notebook is 90 degrees hot
but what can I do that with my Pc the Graka clocks up
For the notebook use specify Intel and partly also Nvidia somewhat higher temperature limits, than for Desktop hardware, what here above all the buildable cooling possibilities is owed.
The Geforce GTX 1050Ti may actually be clocked a bit higher in notebooks by Nvidia at maximum boost than it is intended for the GTX 1050Ti for desktops in Nvidia reference design.
Your desktop PC could tolerate a generally flottier graphics card, as your content question on both devices in your settings very clearly indicates an existing GPU limit in this game.
The GTX 1050Ti GPU can achieve higher boost speeds in notebooks than a GTX 1050Ti in Nvidia's desktop reference specifications.
With Fortnite it is definitely not in this issue of a CPU limit, because then the i7-8750H (TDP = 35 to 45 watts) of the notebook of the i7-8700 (TDP = 65 watts) of the desktop in the clock margin would be clearly inferior.
Unfortunately, that's not quite true.
In a notebook, the clock rates are only reached for a very short time due to temperature. In addition, the clock rates of notebook manufacturers are kept below the possibilities by their own TDP limitation.
The desktop PC clearly has the better cards because the TDPs are not kept artificially low there.
So from my understanding, the desktop variant is clearly superior.
What does not help the questioner, since his FPS numbers despite alleged 100% same setting is lower in the desktop than in the notebook.
If you had read and understood my comment correctly, you would have a clear reference to a graphic limit. If it is a MXM graphics card with its own cooling, economical models such as a GTX 1050 Ti in notebooks are quite stable in terms of load, well above the base clock.
In Fortnite, the CPU-TDP and clock rate does not matter, because in epic settings clearly and solely the 1050Ti limited.
The MXM 3.0 / 3.1 standard allows up to 55 watts in type A design and up to 200 watts in type B.
Nvidia specifies the 1050Ti in reference design with 1290 (BC) to 1392 Mhz, while the 1050 Ti for notebooks is already specified with 1492 (BC) to 1620 Mhz. (latter source: http://www.notebookcheck.com)
To conclude, the combination of an Intel Core i7-8700 with a GTX 1050Ti smells strongly of an OEM all-in-one, which in turn reinforces the assumption of using the most affordable 1050Ti reference in such a desktop.