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Old 05-25-2008, 10:21 PM   #1
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How to OC a Laptop?

Anyone knows if laptop can be overclocked? From looking in the BIOS of my HP DV6885SE, there is no option to OC or even change memory speed/bus. I guess laptops are meant to be OCed.
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Old 05-26-2008, 04:26 PM   #2
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Re: How to OC a Laptop?

I know you can overclock the GPU on some laptops. I never heard of overclocking the CPu or RAM though. There might be an option to do that on Alienware or similiar gaming laptops though.
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Old 05-26-2008, 05:29 PM   #3
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Re: How to OC a Laptop?

Short answer: No. Cooling systems on laptops are all proprietary, so swapping them out with aftermarket coolers would be next to impossible because aftermarket cooler manufacturers would have to cater to the many brands of laptops that exist. Secondly, overclocking voids the warranty and can potentially damage the hardware. Why would a manufacturer want hundreds of laptops that have been damaged from overclocking sent to them? It would be a waste of time to inspect them all and tell the customers that their warranty has been voided. Lastly, a majority of laptops sold are marketed toward business or casual users. How likely is it that any of these people know how to overclock, let alone know what a computer is? Limiting BIOS options is a good way to prevent people from messing up their laptops, sparing the manufacturers' support teams of thousands of phone calls and headaches from ignorant Joe Public users that "accidentally" raised their default FSB of 266 MHz to 500 MHz.
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Old 05-27-2008, 09:06 PM   #4
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Re: How to OC a Laptop?

Carefully!

Sorry, couldn't resist

But as CK8-04 points out - overclocking laptops is something fraught with problems. It can be done by various means, but on top of some electrical hocus-pocus, you'll often need to mod to HSF and even the case to improve air flow (for any significant overclock). So it just not worth it.
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Old 05-28-2008, 12:08 PM   #5
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Re: How to OC a Laptop?

yeah I know there are some hacked bioses you can get that will allow you to OC, but I agree with the other posters that cooling is too difficult to improve to accommodate it.
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