Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Does it make sense to restore an HP pavilion dv7 3050er laptop with a north problem?
Does it make sense to restore an HP pavilion dv7 3050er laptop (4 gig, 2 HDD, Screen 17, 2.4 GHz) with a north problem (replacement is needed), or is it easier to sell for spare parts? New matrix in it. In addition, the battery died to zero.
Just a spare part + repair + battery and not much to add = a new budget laptop.
It scares me how long the new northern bridges live and whether something else will fall off? Plus, this model suffers from high temperatures and an eternally noisy fan.
Answer the question
In order to leave comments, you need to log in
Depending on what the problem is, many HP problems are treated simply by warming up with a hairdryer ...
... without lead flux, damn it :-(
Difficult question, you decide. I still repaired my Samsung RF712 to give to my parents, and bought myself a new one.
Can be refurbished and sold. And you can repair it, insert not 4, but 8 gigs of RAM there. It is unlikely that this will change at least something, but an SSD will not fit there because there is ATA, not Sata III. Better sell for 4 extra. Giga RAM won't make your laptop fly.
It makes no sense, even if you warm up, then again there will be the same problems, warming up is a temporary solution. Replacing the north is expensive. IMHO, it's better to build a budget PC on socket 1151 and not worry
Didn't find what you were looking for?
Ask your questionAsk a Question
731 491 924 answers to any question