Change of CPU in a laptop - Possible?

Sharky Forums


Results 1 to 5 of 5

Thread: Change of CPU in a laptop - Possible?

  1. #1
    Tiger Shark bisonator's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    England
    Posts
    808

    Change of CPU in a laptop - Possible?

    I recently aquired a Packard Bell Easy One notebook, it has a K6-2 450mhz CPU and supports PC100 RAM, the chipset is VIA MPV4 and i believe it supports upto K6-III 550mhz, if i was able to aquire a better CPU, would it work if fitted in the Socket? basically would the current BIOS allow it? also how hard is it to get inside the case of a laptop?
    A64 3200+ 'Venice' (SLK-948u + Enermax 92mm) | 2Gb G.Skill PC4000 HZ | DFI nF3 UT-D | Sapphire Radeon X800XL VIVO 256mb AGP (Cat6.9) | 2x 120Gb Maxtor DiamondMax Plus 9 SATA RAID 1 & 1x 250Gb Maxtor DiamondMax 10 IDE | Antec P160 & Enermax Noisetaker 600w | Logitech G15 keyboard | WinXP-Home (latest updates)

    Sharky's Extreme 3DMark Team

  2. #2
    Crash Test Dummy SkyDog's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2000
    Location
    Upstate New York
    Posts
    12,183
    You usually can't swap CPU's in a laptop because they're often soldered to a board instead of socketed like in a desktop machine. I don't know about your particular system, though. I also don't know if the BIOS would recognize a K6-III.

    Generally, it's not too hard to open up a laptop if you can identify which screws hold it together. Just be VERY careful to keep track of which screws go where, or you can break the system when reassembling it!!!

  3. #3
    Reef Shark rw96823's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2002
    Location
    Honolulu, HI.
    Posts
    347
    if you opened the lappy, you'd find that the CPU doesn't look like the desktop versions (that's what I found on the IBM I opened up).

    The IBM 600 I have cannot be upgraded, but the 600E version can have the chip unit (fan/sink/chip) changed, but from the looks of it, it can be a task for someone not too familiar with laptop configs (like me)

    good luck if you can get it done!

  4. #4
    Man With Nothing To Lose jagojago12's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2000
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Posts
    6,018
    I'm not sure about earlier laptop processors, but the Mobile Pentium 4-M and desktop Pentium 4 are physically identical.
    "If everything you try works, then you are not trying hard enough." - Gordon E. Moore

    Desktop:
    AMD Athlon XP [email protected] (11.0x210) | EPoX EP-8RDA+ | 512MB Crucial PC3200 | VisionTek GeForce4 Ti4600 | nVidia SoundStorm 5.1 | 160GB 7200RPM Western Digital | 48x/12x/48x Lite-On CD-RW | Lite-On 16x DVD-RW | 19" NEC AccuSync 90


    Laptop:
    Intel Pentium-M 1.4GHz ULV | 512MB Nanya PC2700 | ATi Mobility Radeon 9200 | 60GB 4200RPM Toshiba | 8x/16x/10x/24x Matshita DVD/CDRW | 12.1" Sony XGA TFT


    SharkyExtreme 3DMark Team

  5. #5
    Tiger Shark bisonator's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2002
    Location
    England
    Posts
    808
    well, on the AMD website, the mobile chips look similar to the desktops, but with 'mobile' written on them somwhere.
    A64 3200+ 'Venice' (SLK-948u + Enermax 92mm) | 2Gb G.Skill PC4000 HZ | DFI nF3 UT-D | Sapphire Radeon X800XL VIVO 256mb AGP (Cat6.9) | 2x 120Gb Maxtor DiamondMax Plus 9 SATA RAID 1 & 1x 250Gb Maxtor DiamondMax 10 IDE | Antec P160 & Enermax Noisetaker 600w | Logitech G15 keyboard | WinXP-Home (latest updates)

    Sharky's Extreme 3DMark Team

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •