- Jun 25, 2004
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I recently picked up a Sandy Bridge Celeron (B830) laptop (Asus X401) for free because it needed a hard drive and keyboard. Performance is decent, battery lasts about 4.5 hours which is a lot less than my Haswell Celeron Chromebook (~11 hours) of similar size and specs. I'm considering bumping it up to an i3 or i5 as long as it's not going to murder the battery life, but I haven't yet decided on what chip to buy, if any.
So far as I can tell, all Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge socket G2 chips have a 35w TDP aside from a few i7 QM chips, so it should be safe to swap any dual core for any other, so long as my bios supports it. I'm well aware of the performance as well as TDP vs power consumption differences in desktops, but I don't know how they compare in laptops. It's probably safe to assume any higher clocked chip of a given generation will negatively affect real-world battery life, and Ivy Bridge chips of similar model number (e.g. 2310m vs 3110m) are clocked 1-300mhz higher so they probably offer similar power characteristics, but I have not been able to find any apples-to-apples comparisons.
How much more battery life (both idle and load) can I expect with an IB Celeron (with the same clocks) vs the SB chip that's in it? Roughly how much will moving up to an i3 of similar clock hurt battery life, if at all? How about an i5 which can turbo up to 1000mhz higher?
Sandy Bridge G2 chips are significantly cheaper than Ivy on eBay. It appears I can get a SB i3 for ~$25, an i5 for $28, while an IB Celeron/Pentium is $7, i3 is about $40-45 and an i5 is ~$80. Worth it? What would you get?
So far as I can tell, all Sandy Bridge and Ivy Bridge socket G2 chips have a 35w TDP aside from a few i7 QM chips, so it should be safe to swap any dual core for any other, so long as my bios supports it. I'm well aware of the performance as well as TDP vs power consumption differences in desktops, but I don't know how they compare in laptops. It's probably safe to assume any higher clocked chip of a given generation will negatively affect real-world battery life, and Ivy Bridge chips of similar model number (e.g. 2310m vs 3110m) are clocked 1-300mhz higher so they probably offer similar power characteristics, but I have not been able to find any apples-to-apples comparisons.
How much more battery life (both idle and load) can I expect with an IB Celeron (with the same clocks) vs the SB chip that's in it? Roughly how much will moving up to an i3 of similar clock hurt battery life, if at all? How about an i5 which can turbo up to 1000mhz higher?
Sandy Bridge G2 chips are significantly cheaper than Ivy on eBay. It appears I can get a SB i3 for ~$25, an i5 for $28, while an IB Celeron/Pentium is $7, i3 is about $40-45 and an i5 is ~$80. Worth it? What would you get?