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MJimLay
AKA FlexBaud
Premium
join:2004-10-06
Pensacola, FL
kudos:2

1 edit

reply to MJimLay

Re: Notebook Repair

Sheesh. It almost isn't worth it. I called Dell and they want near $500 for it and I hear that my local best buy would want $150 to $250 for it.

The laptop is 3 or 4 years old and it's pretty scrached up on the outside. Plus the fact that it only has a 80 GB Drive and 1.5 GB Ram.

The ONLY reason I like that laptop is because it has a 15" LCD running at 1680 X 1050 and has a Radeon X300 video card.

Dell currently has a laptop on sale for $349 which has a 160 GB Drive and 2 GB Ram, but it has some Intel video card and a low resolution 15" WLED display 1388 X 788 or something like that.


MJimLay
AKA FlexBaud
Premium
join:2004-10-06
Pensacola, FL
kudos:2

I just called one of my local shops and they can fix it for $125 or so. I don't know. By the time I upgrade the hard drive and ram.... I'd be up to the same price as a new laptop.... and I'm sure the battery on this one will need replacing soon as it's 3 years old now.



PeteC2
Got Mouse?
Premium,MVM
join:2002-01-20
Bristol, CT
kudos:5
Reviews:
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said by MJimLay:

I just called one of my local shops and they can fix it for $125 or so. I don't know. By the time I upgrade the hard drive and ram.... I'd be up to the same price as a new laptop.... and I'm sure the battery on this one will need replacing soon as it's 3 years old now.
Sad but true. Unlike desktops, notebooks are still not very upgradable at a decent cost versus value rate. I have known folks who replace their notebook when the battery goes in 2 to 4 years, as by then, combined with the price of a new battery, upgrading ram, hard drives, etc., with no ability to upgrade the motherboard/chipset, makes this a tough proposition to recommend.

No matter what the value of your notebook was initially, almost any $400 - $500 lappy will easily beat it, plus you have a warranty to boot.

This may not be a popular thing to say, but frankly, I look at "owning" a notebook as being more like leasing a car! You get it for a couple of years or so and then move on to a newer model...IMHO, one should never, ever, ever look at a notebook as an "investment", and should only buy the features and level of performance to match one's immediate to short-term future needs.
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