Latitude D510 laptop, about 2004 and I want to upgrade to a newer, faster processor...is it possible? What do I need to know in order to get a replacement processor?
Actually, you can upgrade your processor, however the options are limited.
The two processors that will work with this laptop are:
Intel® Pentium® M Processor 730 (1.60GHz), 740 (1.73GHz)
Intel Celeron® M Processor 350 (1.30GHz, 1MB L2 cache)
So depending on which processor and results you are looking for, may depend on if you want to invest in a new Laptop.
http://www.dell.com/downloads/emea/products/latit/LAT_D510_emea.pdf
SOURCE: Need faster PIII mobile processor for CPx 650 laptop = X ghz proc
I'm not sure about the CPU upgrade--these generally are hard to determine and this is complicated by the fact that Pentium III processors are no longer made, I would say that you could go on e-Bay and find one there (should be cheap) and try it.
An easier way to get a little more speed is to bring the memory up to the maximum the laptop will hold. (In your case 512 MB). That and set the paging file to allow the system to determine the size needed (Unless your system has Linux installed). Any further upgrades on an older system like yours are usually just a waste of money.
SOURCE: system upgrade
You would need to provide the laptop family, ie Inspiron, Latitude, Precision, and the model #, D600, M60 , etc
SOURCE: Upgrade the processor on a Toshiba equium l40 series from a celron M
The core2 duo chips will be a different socket to your celeron cpu so can do that unfortunately. You may be able to upgrade to a faster cpu of the same socket type but will probably need a bios update for it to run at proper speed.
Unfortunately laptops arent really designed to be upgraded at all bar extra ram/hd/dvdrw.
Hope that helps?
SOURCE: can i upgrade my toshiba laptop l10 273 1.4
Yes just make sure you have the right socket for the new chip. example- a 939 socket will only accept 939 processor.
SOURCE: Dell Latitude CPx processor upgrade to P4 ?
You cannot upgrade from a Pentium III to a Pentium 4 without replacing the motherboard.
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