This to me is a design flaw. For me this is all the more reason to get a machine with a much better MTBF. Unless there is a permanent fix for a flaw, it is not worth fixing for a short time only to break again.Ragnarok wrote: There was an era of Nvidia GPUs that were made in a way that means they could fail at very low temperatures, or even just a relatively modest number of shallow thermal cycles (at a temperature right about the "moderate workload level" as well). When it became public, there was a big broohaha, Nvidia lost 31% on the stock market and had to start paying out all sorts of compensation.\
Revamping a laptop
- Technician1002
- Captain

- Posts: 5189
- Joined: Sat Apr 04, 2009 11:10 am
Read the bottom paragraph of the post you quoted. I'd be replacing the faulty 770 with the replacement 771 spec - fully compatible, but does not have the same thermal problems.Technician1002 wrote:This to me is a design flaw. Unless there is a permanent fix for a flaw, it is not worth fixing for a short time only to break again.
I know you don't think it's worth it, but I like my daft little projects. I'm not looking for reasons why I shouldn't do it, but reasons why I can't.
Does that thing kinda look like a big cat to you?
Excellent, go out and find some scrapped computers, Pentium 1s and 2s are readily available, do at least a dozen processor holders without them getting too hot to touch, and you'll be fine with it.I've actually already got a soldering heat gun. Not a huge amount of practise with it beyond abusing it for reshaping plastic parts for models, but it's certainly very good at that. I've got some old electrical junk I can test it on first though.
Make sure you leave the processor in, and the heatsink off, and you'll have no troubles.
I won't wish you good luck, only a word of advice; Soldering irons/heat guns can never be too cold.
/sarcasm, /hyperbole
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