Grumble grumble laptops
Posted: Sun Feb 05, 2012 5:08 pm
This is more of a gripe than a question, but feel free to share your experiences.
I realize that laptops aren't meant to be user-serviced beyond a few basic peripherals, but the degree of non-serviceability can be quite ridiculous. It wouldn't be difficult to make an easily opened case, accessible parts, and to include a technical diagram somewhere in the materials, but they just don't.
For example, to remove the bad inverter on my gaming laptop, which is probably the most common problem in laptops beyond things like HDD or memory, I just had to remove 62 screws, pull out the HDD, DVD, and RAM, unplug and remove the keyboard, trackpad, and front cover, then unhook a significant amoung of the internal wiring, separate the upper and lower halves, and then detach the screen shroud with the help of a very sharp knife.
Now, none of that stuff up until the detachment of the screen shroud is actually necessary to remove an inverter, except for the fact that because of the design of the laptop, the shroud can't be removed without separating the halves, and doing that requires everything else I just listed. I know some laptops out there will be easier to deal with than mine, but I've now learned a valuable thing to consider when purchasing - whether or not a 5 minute job take 5 minutes, or 2 hours.
I realize that laptops aren't meant to be user-serviced beyond a few basic peripherals, but the degree of non-serviceability can be quite ridiculous. It wouldn't be difficult to make an easily opened case, accessible parts, and to include a technical diagram somewhere in the materials, but they just don't.
For example, to remove the bad inverter on my gaming laptop, which is probably the most common problem in laptops beyond things like HDD or memory, I just had to remove 62 screws, pull out the HDD, DVD, and RAM, unplug and remove the keyboard, trackpad, and front cover, then unhook a significant amoung of the internal wiring, separate the upper and lower halves, and then detach the screen shroud with the help of a very sharp knife.
Now, none of that stuff up until the detachment of the screen shroud is actually necessary to remove an inverter, except for the fact that because of the design of the laptop, the shroud can't be removed without separating the halves, and doing that requires everything else I just listed. I know some laptops out there will be easier to deal with than mine, but I've now learned a valuable thing to consider when purchasing - whether or not a 5 minute job take 5 minutes, or 2 hours.