October 1, 20178 yr Hello everyone Last Tuesday a power overload blew out my computer loosing everything I had there. Since I am beginning the University next year I am thinking on moving to a laptop which can render video, run Photoshop, some games, web browsing, and run FSX with PMDG's 737, 747, and 777, Aerosoft's Airbus, REX, and some add on scenery (FlyTampa Saint Marteen, LatinVFR Guatemala, Costa Rica, Tegucigalpa) So I have 4 options: Asus VivoBook S15: Core i5 7200u GT 940MX 8GB DDR4 RAM 1TB HDD DELL Inspiron 15 5565: AMD A12-9700P Integrated Radeon R7 graphics 8GB DDR4 RAM 1TB HDD ASUS X556UA: Core i5 7200U Intel HD620 graphics 8GB DDR4 RAM 1TB HDD 8GB DDR4 RAM HP Pavilion 14-al001la Core i5 6200U Intel HD 520 graphics 8GB DDR4 RAM 1TB HDD 8GB DDR4 RAM So which do you think will be a good decision?
October 1, 20178 yr None of them for sure. Look to all the options offered by MSI Gaming Series Laptops and you' won't believe your eyes!. Cheers, Ed Cheers, Ed MSFS2020 Steam // Rig: Corsair Graphite 760T Full Tower - ASUS MBoard Maximus XII Hero Z490 - CPU Intel i9-10900K - 64GB RAM - MSI RTX2080 Super 8GB - [1xNVMe M.2 1TB + 1xNVMe M.2 2TB (Samsung)] + [1xSSD 1TB + 1xSSD 2TB (Crucial)] + [1xSSD 1TB (Samsung)] + 1 HDD Seagate 2TB + 1 HDD Seagate External 4TB - Monitor LG 29UC97C UWHD Curved - PSU Corsair RM1000x // Thrustmaster FCS & MS XBOX Controllers
October 1, 20178 yr Author 14 minutes ago, edpatino said: None of them for sure. Look to all the options offered by MSI Gaming Series Laptops and you' won't believe your eyes!. Cheers, Ed I've seen them, but they are too expensive for what I've planned to spend on my laptop
October 1, 20178 yr 1 hour ago, luismol1999 said: Since I am beginning the University next year I am thinking on moving to a laptop which can render video, run Photoshop, some games, web browsing, and run FSX with PMDG's 737, 747, and 777, Aerosoft's Airbus, REX, and some add on scenery (FlyTampa Saint Marteen, LatinVFR Guatemala, Costa Rica, Tegucigalpa) I think you'd find that any of them would struggle to render video unless you have a lot of spare time to leave it running. Running FSX with those particular add-ons really needs a decent desktop or a dedicated gaming laptop unless you have all of the setup sliders fully to the left and even then... 1 hour ago, luismol1999 said: So which do you think will be a good decision? Can't help but to agree with Ed. You'll probably spend most of your time trying to tweak things to get barely acceptable performance (and wishing that you'd gone for something better). If the screen resolution is 1920x1080 or less, you'd probably get most modern games to run at lower settings but FSX needs CPU (and to a lesser extent, GPU) grunt to run well. Have you looked at the possibility of having your old system repaired? i7-14700k | Asus ROG STRIX Z790-F Gaming WIFI | 32GB DDR5 RAM | MSI RTX 4080 Super | WD Black SN850X 1TB & 2TB | Corsair HX1000i ATX3.0 | MSI MAG401QR 40" monitor | Win 11 Pro 64-bit | Meta Quest 3
October 1, 20178 yr Author 25 minutes ago, vortex681 said: I think you'd find that any of them would struggle to render video unless you have a lot of spare time to leave it running. Running FSX with those particular add-ons really needs a decent desktop or a dedicated gaming laptop unless you have all of the setup sliders fully to the left and even then... Can't help but to agree with Ed. You'll probably spend most of your time trying to tweak things to get barely acceptable performance (and wishing that you'd gone for something better). If the screen resolution is 1920x1080 or less, you'd probably get most modern games to run at lower settings but FSX needs CPU (and to a lesser extent, GPU) grunt to run well. Have you looked at the possibility of having your old system repaired? The problem with the old system is that received the overload blew up so repairing it would mean to buy it again and the price is practically the same as the VivoBook I mentioned
October 1, 20178 yr You have my sympathies but I still think you'd be unhappy with the systems you've listed. i7-14700k | Asus ROG STRIX Z790-F Gaming WIFI | 32GB DDR5 RAM | MSI RTX 4080 Super | WD Black SN850X 1TB & 2TB | Corsair HX1000i ATX3.0 | MSI MAG401QR 40" monitor | Win 11 Pro 64-bit | Meta Quest 3
October 1, 20178 yr I got a two year old Alienware 17 laptop with i7 4710, 16GB ram and a GTX 970m and it runs P3Dv4 nice. And its two years old. Check Alienware out. The current models you can have a GTX 1080 and i7 7700 if you like. Pete Richards I've owned every version of flight simulator since Flight Simulator 3.0 in 1988. Windows 11 Pro loaded on a 4TB Gen5 Crucial T700 SSD, 4TB Samsung 990 Pro SSD, Ryzen 9 7950x3d, AS Rock X670e Taichi Motherboard, Gigabyte Gaming RTX 4090 OC 24GB, 64GB (2x32GB) Viper Venom DDR5-6000MT/s, MSI 32" MAG 321UPX QD-OLED 260hz 4K Gaming Monitor.
October 1, 20178 yr I wouldn't look at anything less than this as a spec: https://www.ebuyer.com/791996-msi-gl62m-7rd-gaming-laptop-and-free-backpack-9s7-16j962-632 Even with this, it would probably be an underwheming experience P3D v4.5 MSFS2020 Hisense 50" 4K TV Ryzen 9600x 64gb DDR5 6000mhz, Asrock B650m HDV/M.2 Gigabyte 16gb 9070XT, Thermalright Aqua Elite 240mm 2TB NVMe Boot/FS2020 Drive, 2TB NVMe P3D Drive. Saitek Yoke, Pedals, Radio Panel, Switch Panel, 2 x FiPs
October 1, 20178 yr Author 2 hours ago, vortex681 said: You have my sympathies but I still think you'd be unhappy with the systems you've listed. Thanks and thanks for the advice
October 1, 20178 yr Author 3 hours ago, vortex681 said: You have my sympathies but I still think you'd be unhappy with the systems you've listed. Thanks and thanks for the advice
October 1, 20178 yr Author (UPDATE) Since I'm not going to get a good performance on a laptop, I'll build another PC
October 1, 20178 yr Consider...as a minimum..... I7-7700, nvidia 1060 preferably 1070, 16 gigs ram. I've been using laptops for flight sim since approx 2002 and one thing I've learned is buy as much horsepower as you can as hardware upgrades are usually not possible in most cases except for ram and disk drives. You'll future proof your purchase and in the long run it'll be less expensive. Dave
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