@@kasp9290 so far it's great, yes it's bit heavy and the hdmi ports, charging ports are behind rather than sides.... I see myself using this for atleast 4 yrs. Battery backup you could except around 3.5 hrs on efficiency mode. Mine has 80 percent battery health.
Got 1 a few months ago with a p2000 and i7 8850h. Repasted, undervolted. Great work and gaming machine and underrated feature its replacable charging ports make this a machine I will keep for years to come along with the removable battery. Edit: Upgraded to a P53 with an RTX 4000. Best decision I made and hope the new owner of my P52 shows it some love. I play games more often now so i needed something modern at least
I would use it as a daily driver if it wasn't so chonky in my backpack. I love it, but I will likely end up selling my personal one as I do not use it often enough. It needs some love.
@@HaisteComputerRepair im 6ft 2 and 180lbs tbh so my big ass built has no problem with it lol. I carry it around alot and my back is stronger partly because of it 😂
Thank you for showing the dissection of that unit. My knowledge of laptop repair is pretty much non-existent. I never needed to use one for my work requirements, prior to retirement. However, I bought my wife a couple, several years ago, to surf the internet and play card games. When problems began to develop with them, I would just wipe the drive and take the device to e-waste.
@@HaisteComputerRepair I'm certain that you're right. However, they were so slow and inadequate, I didn't want to bother with them any longer. Personally, at this stage in my life, I 'll only build and use desktops.
A question please . Would it not be possible to leave the leads from the screen to the upper chassis connected and just release all of the screen screws and chassis screws and lift the chassis gently and tilt it back onto the screen toe access the thermal assembly rather than disconnect everything ?
Being that you have to remove the plastic piece between the palmrest and the motherboard, you pretty well have to disconnect as you will not be able to reach the heatsink assembly otherwise. It's much less cumbersome to just disconnect, just make sure you remember where to put things back. Take pics or use my video as a guide.
@@shiyunL1 I would say quite a while. The main thing to think about is size, weight, and preference for display panel. The CPU/GPU will be pretty solid for a lot of work. For the cost/benefit.
The Xeon has slightly faster base and turbo CPU speeds and also has the slightly better UHD P630 integrated graphics (on top of whatever dedicated Quadro GPU you have). Also, the Xeon CPU supports ECC memory, if that matters in your use case.
Well, the P53 will support faster RAM speeds and otherwise I am thinking that performance will be similar. What is the cost different between the two you are looking at?
I am thinking you would be able to manage 120+ fps at 1080p DX12 if you keep the settings at low. On the smaller display panel it still looks pretty good, I think.
Much needed video.recently got one.
Awesome, good luck with yours!
Hey, i am also thinking about buying a p52.
What are your thoughts on the laptop? do you recommend it?
@@kasp9290 so far it's great, yes it's bit heavy and the hdmi ports, charging ports are behind rather than sides.... I see myself using this for atleast 4 yrs. Battery backup you could except around 3.5 hrs on efficiency mode. Mine has 80 percent battery health.
Got 1 a few months ago with a p2000 and i7 8850h. Repasted, undervolted. Great work and gaming machine and underrated feature its replacable charging ports make this a machine I will keep for years to come along with the removable battery.
Edit: Upgraded to a P53 with an RTX 4000. Best decision I made and hope the new owner of my P52 shows it some love. I play games more often now so i needed something modern at least
I would use it as a daily driver if it wasn't so chonky in my backpack. I love it, but I will likely end up selling my personal one as I do not use it often enough. It needs some love.
@@HaisteComputerRepair im 6ft 2 and 180lbs tbh so my big ass built has no problem with it lol. I carry it around alot and my back is stronger partly because of it 😂
great work, love your content :D
Thank you!
Nice review :) thanks
Thanks for watching :)
Thank you for showing the dissection of that unit. My knowledge of laptop repair is pretty much non-existent. I never needed to use one for my work requirements, prior to retirement. However, I bought my wife a couple, several years ago, to surf the internet and play card games. When problems began to develop with them, I would just wipe the drive and take the device to e-waste.
Yes, more than likely you had functional laptops that just needed some service. Better to learn late than never at all!
@@HaisteComputerRepair I'm certain that you're right. However, they were so slow and inadequate, I didn't want to bother with them any longer. Personally, at this stage in my life, I 'll only build and use desktops.
A question please . Would it not be possible to leave the leads from the screen to the upper chassis connected and just release all of the screen screws and chassis screws and lift the chassis gently and tilt it back onto the screen toe access the thermal assembly rather than disconnect everything ?
Being that you have to remove the plastic piece between the palmrest and the motherboard, you pretty well have to disconnect as you will not be able to reach the heatsink assembly otherwise. It's much less cumbersome to just disconnect, just make sure you remember where to put things back. Take pics or use my video as a guide.
@HaisteComputerRepair thanks for replying ..Nice machine just pig to replace the fans ....
@ yeah it takes a while but it’s not too bad
great video
Thank you :)
@@HaisteComputerRepair would you know how long this laptop would last if i bought it late 2024?
@@shiyunL1 I would say quite a while. The main thing to think about is size, weight, and preference for display panel. The CPU/GPU will be pretty solid for a lot of work. For the cost/benefit.
@@HaisteComputerRepair ok thanks⚓
I have the same specs , except the processor which is i7 8th gen (h series) is it same to xeon ?
The Xeon has slightly faster base and turbo CPU speeds and also has the slightly better UHD P630 integrated graphics (on top of whatever dedicated Quadro GPU you have). Also, the Xeon CPU supports ECC memory, if that matters in your use case.
Hi Haiste,
Would you please recommend which one is better P52 i7 8th gen P2000 or P53 i7 9th gen T1000?
Well, the P53 will support faster RAM speeds and otherwise I am thinking that performance will be similar. What is the cost different between the two you are looking at?
@@HaisteComputerRepair
P52 i7 g8 quadro P1000 : USD 450
P53 i7 g9 quadro T1000 : USD 570
Both at same 16GB RAM & 512GB SSD
Hi haste I have a p53 core i7 9th generation with a 64gb ram and a Nvidia quandro T2000 graphics card how much fps can I run on Fortnite ?
I am thinking you would be able to manage 120+ fps at 1080p DX12 if you keep the settings at low. On the smaller display panel it still looks pretty good, I think.
Watching this on my p52 with i7 processor.. still kicking for CAD works.
But not that smooth for the latest version of autodesk apps like revit 2021.
I am not that familiar with Autodesk, but curious. Is it more CPU or GPU dependent?
Excellent review man 😀,can you recommend p52 for trading and maybe 3 external monitors.What's the best options ,every suggestion is welcome 🤗 , thanks
Yeah definitely a P52 would work well. Good luck.
Whats the highest amount of ram and graphic card i can update this ?
Would this be able to play cs 2 at 100 ?
Probably with adjusted settings yes
i request
p14
p70
Hopefully I get some, I'd like to check those out as well!
@HaisteComputerRepair Ok, i'll wait
How much this pc?
I bought this several months ago, so check eBay and that will give you an idea. I purchased from my provincial gov't surplus, so prices vary.
Too hard to repaste
I am used to the work, so it's not so bad for me. Kind of an interesting challenge.