- Joined
- Nov 12, 2014
- Messages
- 508 (0.14/day)
- Location
- Ilirska Bistrica, Slovenia
System Name | Thermaltake |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 5 5800X3D @ 4.60 GHz |
Motherboard | Gigabyte B550 Aorus Elite V2 |
Cooling | Thermalright Peerless Assassin |
Memory | 32 GB Crucial Ballistix @ 3600 MHz CL16 |
Video Card(s) | XFX 319 Merc 6800 XT |
Storage | Kingston 256GB SSD | Kingston 240GB NVMe | Samsung 1TB NVMe | Samsung F3 1TB HDD | Barracuda 2TB HDD |
Display(s) | 34" ultrawide LG 34GL750B 144hz 1ms | 55" LG UR91 4k@60Hz |
Case | Phanteks Eclipse P400 |
Audio Device(s) | ALC 1220 120dB SNR HD Audio |
Power Supply | Thermaltake GF1 850 W - 80 Plus Gold |
Mouse | Logitech G502 HERO Lightspeed |
Keyboard | Asus TUF Gaming K3 |
Software | Windows 11 Pro x64 |
Hey guys! i wanted to tell you about breathing some new life in an old laptop.
The story:
The company where my mom works was clearing out some stuff and she came across an old, almost unused laptop. An HP 6910P, a gem from the good old days with basically no signs of use. It was sitting in a closet for almost 10 years. She decided she wants to use it as her secondary PC, just to surf the web etc. from the confines of her couch, hehe. She asked me to look at it and try to get it to work.
Getting it to work:
The laptop came with the companies Windows XP installation, which I instantly removed and put on a fresh install of Windows 10. Or at least tried to. As soon as I would try to boot the Windows setup, it would just hang on me. Nothing a BIOS update can't fix, right? WRONG. Even after updating the BIOS, the PC wouldn't boot into Win 10 setup, so I had to opt for Windows 7.
After installation, I noticed the laptop was slow, loud as hell and felt very hot. I fired up AIDA64 and when I say fired up, I mean it. Idle temperatures were around 90 °C for the CPU, 70 °C for the GPU and it was throttling with no workload whatsoever, oh dear. I opened her up, dusted her off, changed the thermal paste to some quality Arctic MX-4 and would you look at that, idle temperatures are now around 40 °C and the laptop is virtually silent, whoah!
The laptop sports an Intel Core 2 Duo T7700 with a frequency of 2,4 GHz, with a whopping 4 MB of L2 cache, haha. A dedicated GPU, the Mobility Radeon X2300. The RAM is some shitty 2 GB DDR2 667 MHz memory, we're gonna need to upgrade there. And the hard drive, oh the hard drive, an 80 GB Seagate Momentus, which is actually a 7200 RPM drive, fast for a laptop, but still slow as hell for today's standards.
Now that we've fixed the temperature issues, let's try to get that Windows 10 to work. I insert the same USB as before, run the automated setup and would you look at that, upgrading from Windows 7 to Windows 10 worked flawlessly!! But there's two more issues with the PC. It takes almost 3 minutes to boot and open a web browser. Also, the GPU driver is not working so the screen is working at a non-native resolution.
I fixed the GPU driver problem by forcibly installing legacy ATI drivers through device manager, easy fix that took 5 minutes to do. The PC runs okay now, but it still takes a lot of time to open new windows and programs. I check the speeds of the hard drive with HDTune and the speed reported for read was a measly 10 MB/s. Out with the old Momentus and in with something new, a 120 GB Kingston SSD, which is more than enough for a PC used only for web browsing. I used EASEUS Partition Manager to clone the old drive to the new one and it was just plug and play from there.
The SSD really did it's magic. It's nice to see a PC boot in less than 10 seconds! I even recorded a boot video but I can't upload it here, what a bummer.
The PC now works cool, silent, fast and responsive. My mom is happy and uses it everyday. And it's 15 years old!
Expenses:
some thermal paste (not even 1 €)
Kingston SSD (30 €)
5-6 hours of my time (priceless cause ma' is happy)
Stuff left to do:
buy another stick of 2 GB RAM or change them both to have 4 GB running at 800 MHz
replace the battery because this one is flat
The story:
The company where my mom works was clearing out some stuff and she came across an old, almost unused laptop. An HP 6910P, a gem from the good old days with basically no signs of use. It was sitting in a closet for almost 10 years. She decided she wants to use it as her secondary PC, just to surf the web etc. from the confines of her couch, hehe. She asked me to look at it and try to get it to work.
Getting it to work:
The laptop came with the companies Windows XP installation, which I instantly removed and put on a fresh install of Windows 10. Or at least tried to. As soon as I would try to boot the Windows setup, it would just hang on me. Nothing a BIOS update can't fix, right? WRONG. Even after updating the BIOS, the PC wouldn't boot into Win 10 setup, so I had to opt for Windows 7.
After installation, I noticed the laptop was slow, loud as hell and felt very hot. I fired up AIDA64 and when I say fired up, I mean it. Idle temperatures were around 90 °C for the CPU, 70 °C for the GPU and it was throttling with no workload whatsoever, oh dear. I opened her up, dusted her off, changed the thermal paste to some quality Arctic MX-4 and would you look at that, idle temperatures are now around 40 °C and the laptop is virtually silent, whoah!
The laptop sports an Intel Core 2 Duo T7700 with a frequency of 2,4 GHz, with a whopping 4 MB of L2 cache, haha. A dedicated GPU, the Mobility Radeon X2300. The RAM is some shitty 2 GB DDR2 667 MHz memory, we're gonna need to upgrade there. And the hard drive, oh the hard drive, an 80 GB Seagate Momentus, which is actually a 7200 RPM drive, fast for a laptop, but still slow as hell for today's standards.
Now that we've fixed the temperature issues, let's try to get that Windows 10 to work. I insert the same USB as before, run the automated setup and would you look at that, upgrading from Windows 7 to Windows 10 worked flawlessly!! But there's two more issues with the PC. It takes almost 3 minutes to boot and open a web browser. Also, the GPU driver is not working so the screen is working at a non-native resolution.
I fixed the GPU driver problem by forcibly installing legacy ATI drivers through device manager, easy fix that took 5 minutes to do. The PC runs okay now, but it still takes a lot of time to open new windows and programs. I check the speeds of the hard drive with HDTune and the speed reported for read was a measly 10 MB/s. Out with the old Momentus and in with something new, a 120 GB Kingston SSD, which is more than enough for a PC used only for web browsing. I used EASEUS Partition Manager to clone the old drive to the new one and it was just plug and play from there.
The SSD really did it's magic. It's nice to see a PC boot in less than 10 seconds! I even recorded a boot video but I can't upload it here, what a bummer.
The PC now works cool, silent, fast and responsive. My mom is happy and uses it everyday. And it's 15 years old!
Expenses:
some thermal paste (not even 1 €)
Kingston SSD (30 €)
5-6 hours of my time (priceless cause ma' is happy)
Stuff left to do:
buy another stick of 2 GB RAM or change them both to have 4 GB running at 800 MHz
replace the battery because this one is flat