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回報翻譯問題
You should play GTA 5 fine on a GTX 1060 and any modern hexacore or better CPU with 12GB RAM or more.
You'll spend more fixing a reburbrished laptop than you will fixing the problem, don't even try. If new you could do basic trouble shooting like cleaning out fans and reattaching connectors/etc.
I was able to play GTA at decent settings and FPS for a while. With past laptops, I've sometimes cleaned out the fans and it helped a bit (but I don't think they were refurbished). Should I give it a try?
Properly refurbed electronics are plenty fine, as are used ones. Most things dont just die or wear out like they are making them out to do.
Check your temps, check your clock speeds, check your settings, post a video with all the listed info and we can help ya out.
Format and clean install the OS
Replace the battery
Likely needs a fan/heatsink Dusting/Cleaning
"wears parts out"
BS...
80-90%+ of consumer electronics now days are solid state electronics (not to be confused with solid state drives, same term, different use). That means there are little to no moving parts.
Only parts in a PC laptop or desktop that "age" with any noticable speed are mechanically moving parts, IE fans and mechanical HDD. And since most modern machines have mechanical units that have 10+ year long lifespans on both HDD and Fans its a moot point.
Next most common point of failure in *old* electronics will be Cpacitors, but again, thats a non-issue in this converstation. He isnt talking about a Y2K machine here thats going on 20 years old with failing power rails due to capacitor aging.
This is a solid case of you having read something somewhere and are now taking it far too litteral. Do electronics *technically* age faster under "heat*, yes, they do. Electron migration is increased, etc. But the chances of that happening, even under extreme (read mining) loads are slim to none.
You should never have experiance that, and if you have its likely something you did wrong, or due to defeact in the device.
FFS, I still have my first main gaming rig bootable, and it runs on a motherboard from 1995...
And under normal use, they'll be fine, gaming isn't ""Highly intensive"" lmao...
I've had a couple of referbs, either bought of amazon, or referbed by myself, and they're fine.
OPs issue is what almost all laptops suffer from.
Poor thermals, which are now worse because of ♥♥♥♥♥♥ paste drying / being pumped out.
All OP would need to do, is clean the fans out properly, and repaste the CPU and GPU with some decent, non electrically conductive, or capcitive paste.
And, I'd be willing to bet his issue is resolved.
The other issue I'm thinking is bloatware, he's probably got lots of software running, that ♥♥♥♥♥ adds up
I have noticed that the fans are really dusty; I have not cleaned them in a while and did not notice how bad it has gotten. I actually had a USB vacuum specifically for laptop fans, but I'm not sure where it went. I do not have a fan pad, so hopefully however I clean the fans will be enough.
I also have figured out that I have not changed the thermal paste since I got the laptop - I found some thermal paste that was bought a few months ago - since it's not new, does thermal paste go bad? Is it still safe to use?
Just look, if it's goopy, it's fine.
Some pastes harden, when they go hard, they're useless.
AFAIK as long as thermal paste is still pasty and liquid it should still be good to use.
The only challenge is that it is a pain in the next to work on laptops...