Fed up with the downhearted performance of laptop processors compare to their desktop counterparts , YouTuber Socket Scienceset themselves the slightly ridiculous task of endeavor to make a gambling laptop that uses only desktop PC portion , as reported byTom ’s Hardware .

The finished intersection is fair bulky and does n’t have a battery — but it is a ruined product all the same and that ’s jolly impressive .

My DIY gaming laptop computer ( w/ background share ) is FINALLY done ! Full Reveal ( youtube.com )

The two cock-a-hoop challenges with this undertaking were size and heat . He need to make every part about 10 times smaller and once it was all slop together in a 3-D - print case , it needed a cooling system that could treat the extra heat that comes with desktop parts . Here are the main merchandise used :

For memory , he launch VLP ( Very Low Profile ) stick of RAM that were around 40 % unretentive than regular RAM that are typically used inmini - ITX case . When reduce down the various parts , the bulky plastics and big fans came off first . The motherboard , Wi - Fi card , VRAM heat swallow hole , audio jacks , Ethernet , and some USB port all came off too . Socket Science note at this point that he had no melodic theme if the motherboard would still work after have got ports just haphazardly remote — but it did .

For the artwork notice , the first joke was using a PCI - E adapter so it could be installed horizontally rather than vertically . The 2d whoremaster was removing all of the oestrus sink and charge card until only the electric circuit board remain .

To keep the easily disintegrable 3D - printed base safe from all the heat , he covered the inside with a slender layer of J - B Weld — an epoxy resin adhesive that can withstand unremitting temperatures as in high spirits as 500 degrees Fahrenheit . The ruined result is no mellow - final stage aluminum casing , but this is a DIY undertaking after all .

For the cool organisation , Socket Science hacked together a combination of superthin fuzz shims , myopic oestrus sinks , and inexpertly dead set heat energy pipes . After fail to find a rooter that was both large enough to do the job and compact enough to fit in the case , he had to make his own instead .

Using the motor from the AMD rooter and some custom 3D - printed blade , he wangle to produce something that did the job . After that , he just needed to mount the keyboard and touchpad with some more J - B Weld , rip apart the monitor , and put the LCD panel in a custom case .

He did guess about figuring out a stamp battery , but it was a muckle more effort than it was worth — after all , no one actually use their gaming laptop computer unplugged . moderately astonishingly , once everything was put together and plugged in with a impost office connective , it worked — material screen background superpower and graphics in a laptop - sized boxful .

In the video , it seems the poor man was a morsel too tired after all that work to give us some benchmark numbers , so we do n’t recognize exactly how well it runs . It would be interesting to see how it performscompared to traditional gambling laptopswith specialized mobile parts , peculiarly given the sizing limitation .