Thursday, July 5, 2012

The Downlow on Changing Your Laptop Processor


Ask most laptop experts and they’d   tell you that changing a laptop processor (or CPU) is a breeze once you take the laptop apart. The tricky part about working on laptops is dealing with the delicate and smallness of the laptop components. So tricky that you could end up placing the wrong component in the wrong place. Lucky for you, most laptop manuals have detailed diagrams showing you, step by step where each component fits. The laptops manuals   furnish you information on the type of processor you need for your laptop. You have all the information at your finger tips.  So here is the lowdown on changing your laptop processor.

Things You Need For The Exercise:
  •          Laptop Manual
  •          Assembly Guide
  •         New Laptop processor
  •     Thermal Compound
  •         Small screwdriver
Onward:
  •         Turn off the laptop and unplug it.
  •       Remove the battery, CD/DVD drive and the hard drive. In case you don’t know the hard drive is located on one side of the laptop
  •         Use your screw driver to remove the screw that holds the laptop cover, and then pull the           hard drive out.
  •        Turn the laptop over and then use the screw driver to remove the screws holding the keyboard.
  •          Flip the laptop over, open it and then remove the keyboard.
  •          Unplug the keyboard connecting the keyboard to the motherboard.
  •         Unplug the heat sink fan.
  •         Unscrew and release the old mechanism holding the old processor and then remove it from the laptop.
  •          Apply a small layer of  Thermal Compound  to the  the new processor.
  •         Make sure the processor is tightly secured and aligned in the processor compartment and then replace the heat sink  fan.
  •          Connect the keyboard to the motherboard  temporarily , restart it then, following your manual instructions, enter the system BIOS.  Hopefully, the new processor should be recognized by the processor.
  •          Once the BIOS   recognizes the new processor, turn off the laptop, unplug it and remove the keyboard.
  •       Reassemble the laptop. Just don’t tighten  the screws to hard while putting the laptop back together.
If you're looking for new processor(or CPU) for your laptop ,Amazon.com  will be a good place to get it from.

Well, that’s a wrap on “ The Downlow on Changing Your Processor.” The exercise is a bit challenging but so long as you take your time and get every component in the right place you should have no problem replacing your processor.
If you are a laptop owner looking to learn how to fix  your laptop including replacing your laptop processor try  te following laptop repair products:
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