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I am a new arch user. This is a hardware question. I have a HP envy m6-1105dx laptop. AMD does a very poor job providing drivers, not just for Linux, but for Windows also.
Does anyone here have experience desoldering a GPU chip and replacing with a different one? Are the pin outs and instruction sets standardized?
I don't want to have to buy a new laptop. Looking at Newegg and Walmart, nVidia laptops cost a lot more than Radeon.
Any help will be appreciated.
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Have you tried catalyst drivers from the non-official repository? I don't think we could describe how to desolder on a forum. You'd have to have a tight tolerance soldering iron to even be able to do it.
Last edited by nomorewindows (2015-03-29 13:36:39)
I may have to CONSOLE you about your usage of ridiculously easy graphical interfaces...
Look ma, no mouse.
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I don't think it's possible. There are laptops that have a MXM socket where you can actually replace the GPU, but due to the fact no laptops have standardized PCB layouts, you won't be able to find a module that fits your laptop. Unless there is a variation of your laptop that had an nVidia GPU as an option. Desoldering the chip is even more hopeless, I am pretty sure the PCB that the chip is soldered on is custom-made for that chip.
[ Arch x86_64 | linux | Framework 13 | AMD Ryzen™ 5 7640U | 32GB RAM | KDE Plasma Wayland ]
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Does anyone here have experience desoldering a GPU chip and replacing with a different one? Are the pin outs and instruction sets standardized?
Not a chance. The GPU is undoubtedly a BGA package. There are Youtube videos that suggest that it can be done, but I have found that with professional rework equipment there is about a 75% chance of getting it right -- after first destroying several boards while learning the technique. Futhermore, there is zero chance that you will find an Nvidia part with the same land and pinouts.
Is there a chance your GPU is on a PCI-e or other high bandwidth port? HP is particularly good about providing service manuals for their laptops. I just ordered an Envy -- only after I downloaded and read the service manual. Edit: BTW, I choose Intel graphics as I am not a gamer.
Consider that for the price you would pay someone to rework your board (and they will not guarantee success) you could just buy a new Envy configured the way you want. Sell the old one or give it to a school and collect the Karma points.
Last edited by ewaller (2015-03-29 16:07:42)
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I didn't realize it was so complicated.
The only place I know of to get the proprietary driver is here. They are usually three or four months behind.
Is there a chance your GPU is on a PCI-e or other high bandwidth port? HP is particularly good about providing service manuals for their laptops.
lspci does not say if it is attached to PCI-e. But it probably is on the PCI-e bus, though not in the form of a removable mini card like the wifi card.
The karma points might be my only option. Thanks to all who replied.
Last edited by arch9699 (2015-03-30 14:01:12)
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