Insert motherboard from notebook in PC?

he
8

My question is whether you can build the motherboard from a laptop and then install it in another (box) - PC and if that fits the dimensions of everything? In addition, I wanted to ask if then a normal rx 580 graphics card can work in combination with the notebook Pruessor?

Ge

Motherboards of laptops have normal other holes from PCs…

Look here;

https://www.giga.de/...eberblick/

Otherwise: no emergency bookmainboard has slots for normal graphics cards…

Pr

No that does not fit and no you can't install a normal graphics card.

With a bit of modding, you can certainly get a notebook motherboard in a normal ATX tower. But you just have to look where you can connect the whole housing connections and take care of the IO behind.

But a normal graphics card does not fit. You could possibly use a mini PCIe to pcie adapter, the most notebooks have a mini pcie slot for a wireless card.

But that's no easy task, you can expect to drill, solder, troubleshoot and make something new. It takes 10 days if everything runs perfectly, I would rather estimate a week. Depending on what kind of claims you have.

he

Hmm, I could then remove the processor from the notebook mainboard and install it in a normal "pc" mainboard and then put it all in the pc or fits the processor is not in a "normal" motherboard

Ge

Do you have to look up the processor specification… (see which socket fits) if it has a socket at all.

Could hardly be worthwhile with the cheap Not Book processors.

Why do you want to do this? Recycling should hardly save anything here.

he

I do not want to spend so much money on a new processor, because I have to invest quite a bit in the graphics card as well? Are there any recommendations for very good price-performance processors?

Ge

It totally depends on what you have for a board with which socket…

And: board, processor, graphics card must match, otherwise you have no fun - they then slow down. Keyword: Porsche with wooden wheels, or Kettcar with Formula 1 engine

he

I once read: The specifications of the processor is at-suitable socket: FCPGA946

What's that supposed to mean and how does that help me?

Ge