Replace GeForce 4 Go

vaibhavk

Junior Member
Aug 17, 2005
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Hi,

Is it possible to replace the GeForce 4 Go display card from my HP Pavilion notebook or is the display card integrated into the system.

Thanks,
Vaibhav
 
Nov 11, 2004
10,855
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Hrm.. It may be possible but at a high risk of you damaging the laptop or anything else you touch/stab/poke/break/drop..

The easiest way is to leave it as it is and get a new laptop.
 

Azndude2190

Golden Member
Jul 4, 2005
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o its a laptop wut a idiot of me(didnt read whole thing)....yeah i highly doubt you'll find a upgrade for your current vid card...i would recommend selling that notebook and get a better one and put in the extra money or get a desktop...are you going to game?
 

Fenuxx

Senior member
Dec 3, 2004
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Most likely, the chip is soldered on the mobo. So, its unlikely that you'll be able to replace it. The only AGP graphics replaceable notebook that I know of is an Alienware Area51-M. Some newer notebooks with PCI-E have MXM cards that are user-upgradeable, so if you want upgradeable graphics in your notebook, then I suggest looking into one of those.
 

RajunCajun

Senior member
Nov 30, 2000
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"The only AGP graphics replaceable notebook that I know of is an Alienware Area51-M."

Not true. Some Dell laptops (and other companies, can't remember which) use different and replaceable agp adapters. The entire video subsystem is placed on a proprietary modular card that can be replaced. This was not designed for upgradability - probably so techs can change just the video out if there's a problem instead of the entire laptop. Plus the option to pick different graphics when first purchasing.

That said, this is not a cheap & inexpensive upgrade. The available modules are expensive and choice is limited. My 3 year old Dell Inspiron has 6 graphics modules which are avialable (mine came with 440MX Go). The highest performing one is a Quadro 4200 Go @ about $350.
 

Fenuxx

Senior member
Dec 3, 2004
907
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On some of the newer AGP laptops, yes (forgot about the XPS-Gen1, and Inspiron 9100 ;) ). However, with a laptop using the GeForce4 Go, I highly doubt that its on a card. Most of the laptops of yesteryear had graphics integrated to the mobo (I know, as I have looked at several, including HP's and Dell's). Some had modules, but most didn't. Only the high-end ones had modules, and the only way to know for sure is to crack open your lappy and check for yourself ;) .