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Could it be beneficial to upgrade an old laptop?

Could it be beneficial to upgrade an old laptop?

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bmarzano
Senior Member
449
11-12-2017, 07:31 AM
#1
I own an old laptop that I’ve been considering upgrading. I’m thinking of selling the current one (Acer i5-7, 16gb DDR4 RAM, SSD, GTX1050ti) since I mainly use it for internet browsing. The other machine I have is an Acer 4752g with i3-2330m 2.2GHz, 4GB 1333MHz DDR3 RAM, NVIDIA GT520M 1GB and an HDD. It runs extremely slowly and is barely functional (the operating system hasn’t been reinstalled). My idea is to swap the HDD for a 120GB SSD and add another 4GB of RAM. Would this make the laptop usable with Windows 10? Would it be a worthwhile investment? Buying the SSD and RAM separately would cost around $30.
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bmarzano
11-12-2017, 07:31 AM #1

I own an old laptop that I’ve been considering upgrading. I’m thinking of selling the current one (Acer i5-7, 16gb DDR4 RAM, SSD, GTX1050ti) since I mainly use it for internet browsing. The other machine I have is an Acer 4752g with i3-2330m 2.2GHz, 4GB 1333MHz DDR3 RAM, NVIDIA GT520M 1GB and an HDD. It runs extremely slowly and is barely functional (the operating system hasn’t been reinstalled). My idea is to swap the HDD for a 120GB SSD and add another 4GB of RAM. Would this make the laptop usable with Windows 10? Would it be a worthwhile investment? Buying the SSD and RAM separately would cost around $30.

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XylixTv
Member
193
11-12-2017, 07:42 AM
#2
I'm not sure about the items you're selling and using. My current setup includes an old MSI laptop with a GTX 960m, a 6th Gen i7 CPU, 16GB RAM, and a 500GB SSD. I use it for backing up my work PC, but I also use it frequently to keep everything running smoothly. I'd prefer a faster CPU and better GPU, along with an SSD for much quicker performance compared to a HDD.
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XylixTv
11-12-2017, 07:42 AM #2

I'm not sure about the items you're selling and using. My current setup includes an old MSI laptop with a GTX 960m, a 6th Gen i7 CPU, 16GB RAM, and a 500GB SSD. I use it for backing up my work PC, but I also use it frequently to keep everything running smoothly. I'd prefer a faster CPU and better GPU, along with an SSD for much quicker performance compared to a HDD.

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Guilty76
Junior Member
3
11-16-2017, 03:03 AM
#3
Sorry if I phrased wrong
Now I use a Acer with following specs: i5-7th gen, 16gb ddr4 ram, SSD, and GTX1050TI
Which is a very good laptop, however I do not use it for more than internet browsing
So I have another laptop I do not use that is very old - i3-2330m, 4gb ram ddr3, gt520m and a HDD and was thinking of adding 4gb ram to that one and replacing HDD with SSD. So I would sell the one I now use and use the old one.
What I was asking is if the old laptop would be enough for using today if I changed the following
.
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Guilty76
11-16-2017, 03:03 AM #3

Sorry if I phrased wrong
Now I use a Acer with following specs: i5-7th gen, 16gb ddr4 ram, SSD, and GTX1050TI
Which is a very good laptop, however I do not use it for more than internet browsing
So I have another laptop I do not use that is very old - i3-2330m, 4gb ram ddr3, gt520m and a HDD and was thinking of adding 4gb ram to that one and replacing HDD with SSD. So I would sell the one I now use and use the old one.
What I was asking is if the old laptop would be enough for using today if I changed the following
.

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JonRius
Junior Member
2
11-16-2017, 05:43 AM
#4
I would trade in the old one and install a better drive in the newer model.
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JonRius
11-16-2017, 05:43 AM #4

I would trade in the old one and install a better drive in the newer model.

C
Chromels
Member
197
11-16-2017, 09:40 AM
#5
Sell the old one as is.
C
Chromels
11-16-2017, 09:40 AM #5

Sell the old one as is.

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_PixelPVP_
Junior Member
40
11-23-2017, 05:03 AM
#6
No one is interested in purchasing the old one.
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_PixelPVP_
11-23-2017, 05:03 AM #6

No one is interested in purchasing the old one.

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alex4max
Member
72
11-29-2017, 05:18 PM
#7
I recently acquired a 2006 Lenovo Thinkpad R60 with significantly reduced specifications (though still better than the R51e I upgraded a few months prior) and have kept it in the drawer for over a decade. I replaced the CMOS battery, upgraded the CPU to Core Duo 2.2Ghz, increased RAM to 4GB, swapped the 80GB HDD for a 120GB SSD, cleaned the cooler assembly, applied fresh thermal paste, and installed Windows 10 Pro. I can browse the web and watch YouTube videos at 720p without any issues.

With these current specifications, your laptop still has several years of life left. Just clean the cooler and consider using an SSD.
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alex4max
11-29-2017, 05:18 PM #7

I recently acquired a 2006 Lenovo Thinkpad R60 with significantly reduced specifications (though still better than the R51e I upgraded a few months prior) and have kept it in the drawer for over a decade. I replaced the CMOS battery, upgraded the CPU to Core Duo 2.2Ghz, increased RAM to 4GB, swapped the 80GB HDD for a 120GB SSD, cleaned the cooler assembly, applied fresh thermal paste, and installed Windows 10 Pro. I can browse the web and watch YouTube videos at 720p without any issues.

With these current specifications, your laptop still has several years of life left. Just clean the cooler and consider using an SSD.