T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
Hello,
Can anyone tell me for certain whether the CPU of the T450 (not the T450s) is socketed or soldered?
Thank you,
Eric
http://www.notebookcheck.net/fileadmin/ ... VGE/hw.jpg
Can anyone tell me for certain whether the CPU of the T450 (not the T450s) is socketed or soldered?
Thank you,
Eric
http://www.notebookcheck.net/fileadmin/ ... VGE/hw.jpg
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RealBlackStuff
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Re: T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
Soldered unfortunately.
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Check out The Boardroom for Parts, Mods and Other Services.
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fb1996
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Re: T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
All mobile Skylake CPUs and all CPUs of both X series and T4??s series are soldered as well - so what?RealBlackStuff wrote:Soldered unfortunately.
Last edited by fb1996 on Thu Sep 10, 2015 4:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
10 (1st Gen), T420s, T440 FrankenPad, X1 Tablet (1st Gen)
Re: T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
Thank you!
Eric
Eric
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RealBlackStuff
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Re: T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
Wouldn't it make more sense to have ONE motherboard with UMPTEEN CPU options,fb1996 wrote:All mobile Skylake CPUs and all CPUs of both X series and T4??s series are soldered as well - so what?RealBlackStuff wrote:Soldered unfortunately.
rather than UMPTEEN identical motherboards except for ONE different CPU?
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ajkula66
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Re: T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
While it may very well be "so what" for you, it's not so for those amongst us who have been upgrading CPUs since the dawn of ThinkPads.fb1996 wrote: All mobile Skylake CPUs and all CPUs of both X series and T4??s series are soldered as well - so what?
So no, not everyone is happy with the given state of affairs.
...Knowledge is a deadly friend when no one sets the rules...(King Crimson)
Cheers,
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Cheers,
George (your grouchy retired FlexView farmer)
AARP club members:A31p, T43pSF
Abused daily: R61
PMs requesting personal tech support will be ignored.
Re: T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
I dislike not being able to upgrade all components of a laptop, or any computer in general. However, given the amount processing power current cpus have, this isn't as much of an issue.
Current Thinkpads: W530 (functional classic keyboard mod), X301, T61, T60, T43, T23, 600X, 770
Other: mk5 Toughbook cf-19, mk1 Toughbook cf-53
Other: mk5 Toughbook cf-19, mk1 Toughbook cf-53
Re: T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
Motherboards are known to be slightly less reliable than processors.fb1996 wrote: All mobile Skylake CPUs and all CPUs of both X series and T4??s series are soldered as well - so what?
High end processors are usually much more expensive than the motherboard alone.
If you ever needed to replace the motherboard, you will have to pay for the processor too.
With motherboards starting to have soldered RAM/dGPU/processors, as more items are soldered on the MB, the probability of the whole MB require replacing for one single issue becomes bigger, and it would cost more.
It is an issue of 'Maintainability'.
That is the main issue with Apple's hardware.
So next thing you know, laptop with RAM/memtest errors, solution: get a new laptop.
===
Re: T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
I concur. I had my share of issues with laptops and I certainly will never buy one that has soldered CPU. If one part fails I want to replace that part, not a whole laptop (because if it will have soldered CPU then MB + CPU replacement will probably cost almost as much as a new laptop)hhhd1 wrote:Motherboards are known to be slightly less reliable than processors.fb1996 wrote: All mobile Skylake CPUs and all CPUs of both X series and T4??s series are soldered as well - so what?
High end processors are usually much more expensive than the motherboard alone.
If you ever needed to replace the motherboard, you will have to pay for the processor too.
With motherboards starting to have soldered RAM/dGPU/processors, as more items are soldered on the MB, the probability of the whole MB require replacing for one single issue becomes bigger, and it would cost more.
It is an issue of 'Maintainability'.
That is the main issue with Apple's hardware.
So next thing you know, laptop with RAM/memtest errors, solution: get a new laptop.
My T430 with GTX 560 Ti (Now with GTX 670)
T430: i5-3320m, 8 GB, SSD + HDD, 1600x900.
T430: i5-3320m, 8 GB, SSD + HDD, 1600x900.
Re: T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
Someone mentioned to me elsewhere that all BGA-package CPUs are soldered--that is, they have no pins.
But couldn't they engineer a socket with matching contact pads for the BGA chips? Seems like it wouldn't be as hard as designing these amazing CPUs . . .
But couldn't they engineer a socket with matching contact pads for the BGA chips? Seems like it wouldn't be as hard as designing these amazing CPUs . . .
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axur-delmeria
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Re: T450 CPU socketed or soldered?
Yes, all chips packaged as BGA are soldered. BGA means "Ball Grid Array"-- "ball" refers to the small globes (balls) of solder used to connect the chip to the board.Almace wrote:Someone mentioned to me elsewhere that all BGA-package CPUs are soldered--that is, they have no pins.
Well, during the Core/Core2 era some BGA CPUs popped up in the market with legs attached-- this allows ULV parts like the U7600 to be installed in Thinkpad T60s. This was possible because the U7600's BGA package was exactly the same size and layout as its socketed brethren, but with pins removed--someone simply managed to solder pins to it.But couldn't they engineer a socket with matching contact pads for the BGA chips? Seems like it wouldn't be as hard as designing these amazing CPUs . . .
But if the CPU platform doesn't have an existing socket, things get much more difficult, if not outright impossible. Intel designed the sockets alongside the processors. I haven't heard of third parties making sockets on their own.
Daily driver: X220 4291-P79 i5-2520M
In reserve: X61 T7500, X60 T2300
In pieces: X60s CS U1300 [board only], two retired but working X61Ts
RIP: 760XD 9546-U9E
In reserve: X61 T7500, X60 T2300
In pieces: X60s CS U1300 [board only], two retired but working X61Ts
RIP: 760XD 9546-U9E
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