Laptop - Stripping out and updating with new components?

Soldato
Joined
25 Sep 2006
Posts
14,455
Hi guys,

I have a Sony Vaio C-series laptop (VGN-C2Z).

Whilst it's serving me perfectly well I feel it could do with an update.

Aesthetically I really like this laptop so am wondering if I can just strip out the old Motherboard, CPU, RAM and graphics (if it isn't intergrated) and replace it with better parts.

What are my limitations? Obviously size as it's a 13" laptop, and the power supply, which it's usually always plugged into the mains.

I recentley upgraded the HDD.

I guess I was just trying to figure out if I could replace the CPU, Mobo, RAM, GFX and maybe a blu-ray drive, if it would all fit and be cheaper than replacing the entire laptop itself.

Thanks in advance,

BennyC
 
You can replace the cpu with a compatible faster one, more memory, and posibily a blue ray, not sure if the graphics hardware has to be compatible for playback though.

The motherboard cannot be replaced as its specific to this model and the graphics are intergrated on this so these will have to remain.
 
Just not worth it. You'd be spending a fair amount of dough anyway, and you could run into a multitude of problems with no warranty either.

My suggested alternative is this:

Sell current laptop for small fortune on an auction site (laptop prices on there are high!)
Use that cash and what you were going to spend on upgrades on a new machine. I strongly recommend a desktop unless it needs to be frequently moved around or you're very space limited. There are plenty of new laptops out there we can recommend for you if you give a rough budget.
 
Thanks for the replies guys.

I'm not looking to do anything short term although just wanted to see if there were cheaper options other than buying a whole new unit.

I already have a desktop rig at home, currently at University.

It was more curiosity than anything else.

Thanks for the help.
 
You can actually buy a basic chassis and add the components you want to them. But usually it's not economically viable and a mobo upgrade is usually out of the question.
 
Back
Top Bottom