HP insane take M/B out to install memory

johnrobert

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Could not believe the amount of work to install memory on this model
its only a couple of years old
I only need to replace wireless card but was hoping to pop it in by removing a door

When people ask me witch laptop to buy I say anything but HP this confirms it


15-g012dx

 
It's not all that bad once you have done a few. This guy took forever in the video and missed some key time-savers. First, that battery powered screwdriver is about 3x slower than a regular driver. Second, it took him way too long to pop the palmrest off using the spudger card. Pulling from the "CD Rom hole" with one finger flexes the assembly and releases the interlocking hooks around the case frame, a 2 second ordeal.

It's not really an HP thing, though. It's a price thing. Acer, Asus, Dell, and Toshiba have also offered "budget" laptops that do not have doors. Apparently, that plastic door and screw must save enough to make sense deleting it for these types. I call them sub-budget laptops. They are sub-budget because if you take the parts individually, and value them, you generally end up more than its retail price point (real-people cost, looking at BOM costs). Obviously HP gets price reductions on volume, but still, I bet HP makes $10 on these but it is worth it because of the add-on/recurring features, software bundling, support and simply having their brand competing on each tier of the store shelves.

I always tell my customers this: "It doesn't matter so much the brand as it does the cost. Stay $600 and above and you will be more likely to get a decent computer. If you want a good computer, spend $1000."

HP makes some really nice machines, but nice machines are never cheap. The Elitebook line is usually first-rate.

IMO, the best "cheap" budget computer is Lenovo. Even at low price points they still invest in the design. I feel that is where HP and others fall behind on their cheap offerings, case design/structural integrity. Lenovo does a decent job on their cheapo's.

EDIT:
No, not all wireless cards are the same. The designs are standardized by the IEEE and come in a handful of flavors and bus types. Some are smaller, some larger and longer. With wireless cards, just because it fits in the slot doesn't mean it will work. Sometimes the BIOS will only initialize certain WIFI chip models.
 
yes agree with that. i love the HP elitebook range, from 6930p right up to the modern ones. really well made long lasting laptops. good resale value too.

buy cheap laptops, you have to take the hits on flexibility.
 
I took it apart today and used a wlan card from a 5 year older HP laptop
it had only one terminal to snap on instead of 2 but I was pleased when it worked

Many thanks for all the advise and tips on buying a new laptop spot on
 
I have the most problems with Dell N series and acer is getting harder to fix too. Some cheap asus laptops like the x54c have non removeable ram embedded in the motherboard. Took awhile to figure that out & had to break the bad news to customer that it wasn't going to be a cheap fix like most laptops.
 
I just did an HP 15 f1010dx for my brother.

It has windows 8.1 and was getting a watch dog error.

At first, to get it to boot at all I had to remove the battery and fully drain the system of power by holding
the power button. Then it would boot once, but would boot very slowly. I couldn't get in because the live
account password wasn't working and I didn't care to log in... they simply said they couldn't get it to boot
at all. So after the first boot, it wouldn't boot again until I power cycled the system. I did some googling and
basically it was chalked up that the hardware in this laptop was crap.

I grabbed the win 10 PE usb I have and booted in, copied all the data just in case. They were mainly concerned
about pictures. Perfect opportunity to use my new faps pro edition!

Before I shut down, I noticed the date and time was wrong. So I went into BIOS and reset it.

Machine seemed to perk up quite a bit after that, booted readily to the log in screen time after time. Just didn't know
the PW so I couldn't get in. I gave it back, and the problem cropped up again a day or two later.

I figure the battery is dead, so I start looking to see how to change it. It's on the under side of the motherboard and
it has no access under neath the laptop. I had to fully disassemble the machine to change this out. Took about 25 min
to take apart since I wasn't familiar with the hardware, and I find out that the battery is actually fine by the one leg of
the battery holder is lose and can come off the board breaking the connection. I get out my soldering iron and put down
some fresh solder onto both legs of the battery holder and for good measure put in a fresh CR2032 battery.

System has been fine for a few weeks now. But in order to change the HDD or CR2032, you have to take the system
basically the whole way apart. Why are these things not accessible via an access door? How much extra does an access
door cost to put in? But I guess when they stop including recovery disks for the few cents they save on each, it's evident
they will spare no expense in trying to cut costs.
 
They don't care if it's not easily serviceable. Not their problem, it seems, and making it more so wouldn't increase sales but would make it more expensive. I can understand their logic, except for it tarnishing the brand as being being "cheaply made."
 
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