F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Notebooks Is the laptop suitable for regular use over five to six years?

Is the laptop suitable for regular use over five to six years?

Is the laptop suitable for regular use over five to six years?

C
cal_gamer10
Member
105
01-09-2021, 04:53 PM
#1
Hello, considering this laptop:
Lenovo Legion 5 Stingray White
Ryzen 7 5800H CPU
RTX 3060 130W 6GB GPU
2x8GB DDR4 3200 MHz RAM
1TB SSD
2560x1440 WQHD sRGB %100 Panel
Ideal for: video editing, rendering, photoshopping, programming and gaming.
Is it a good option?
C
cal_gamer10
01-09-2021, 04:53 PM #1

Hello, considering this laptop:
Lenovo Legion 5 Stingray White
Ryzen 7 5800H CPU
RTX 3060 130W 6GB GPU
2x8GB DDR4 3200 MHz RAM
1TB SSD
2560x1440 WQHD sRGB %100 Panel
Ideal for: video editing, rendering, photoshopping, programming and gaming.
Is it a good option?

S
SmileyMae17
Member
66
01-09-2021, 05:52 PM
#2
The only positive point about the laptop is its portability. In all other areas, a desktop PC performs better. Also, laptops tend to run at thermal limits, which can affect performance. The RTX 3060 inside a laptop isn’t as powerful as an RTX 3060 in a desktop setup—it’s comparable to a desktop RTX 2060.

Comparison link: https://gpu.userbenchmark.com/Compare/Nv...2971vs4034

Unless you need the laptop for its portability, there’s no strong reason to buy one. If you choose a desktop, you can upgrade components like the GPU regularly, making it viable for longer use. For instance, a 6-7 year old GPU would likely be less useful today, especially for gaming and rendering.

I own a GTX 1060 from 2016 that I replaced with a GTX 1660 Ti in 2020. With a desktop PC, I’d have around 4 years left, but I’m not too particular. For casual gaming, you might get about 2 years out of your laptop—less if you demand higher graphics quality later.

For rendering tasks, a solid 3D capability requires at least 32 GB RAM, with 64 GB being ideal.
S
SmileyMae17
01-09-2021, 05:52 PM #2

The only positive point about the laptop is its portability. In all other areas, a desktop PC performs better. Also, laptops tend to run at thermal limits, which can affect performance. The RTX 3060 inside a laptop isn’t as powerful as an RTX 3060 in a desktop setup—it’s comparable to a desktop RTX 2060.

Comparison link: https://gpu.userbenchmark.com/Compare/Nv...2971vs4034

Unless you need the laptop for its portability, there’s no strong reason to buy one. If you choose a desktop, you can upgrade components like the GPU regularly, making it viable for longer use. For instance, a 6-7 year old GPU would likely be less useful today, especially for gaming and rendering.

I own a GTX 1060 from 2016 that I replaced with a GTX 1660 Ti in 2020. With a desktop PC, I’d have around 4 years left, but I’m not too particular. For casual gaming, you might get about 2 years out of your laptop—less if you demand higher graphics quality later.

For rendering tasks, a solid 3D capability requires at least 32 GB RAM, with 64 GB being ideal.