lostinlodos wrote:
Back to the beginning though. Has anyone actually put a real slot processor in a laptop? Probably. I’ve seen a 409 and a 454 strapped to a go cart sled. So I’m sure someone somewhere tried the equivalent with a cpu.
But a better analogy would be building a cabin on top of a jet engine with no ventilation. They run very hot. That’s why even the upper end of entry level processors had big heatsinks stock. Any laptop that did anything would burn out very fast!
I seen desktop Pentium 4's in lap tops a few times, Sony, IBM and Sager all put desktop Pentium 4's in laptops, I think dell did to but I could be wrong there.
AMD was more or less putting better binned desktop K6-2 and iii in laptops and not to long before any there were sk7 mmx Pentiums finding there way into laptops too sooo, yeah a desktop Pii/piii is not so far fetched when you think of that. However I never seen a slot one CPU in a loptop, I think the size and cost would make it not a option. Laptop were still fairly new around that time and cost 1000s of dollars, putting a slot 1 chip in a laptop would only make the cost that much higher.
As for heat, Pii and Piii CPUs did not run all that hot, most of them were sub 35w TDP, with the 450mhz pii being a 28w CPU. those large heatsinks were a by product of a few things, one being a massive plate between the cooler and the core, latter celly's and Piii got rid of the plate and had much smaller coolers even with the higher TDP on some chips. most PC cases of that time had no fans outside the PSU and maybe a low speed 80mm in the front of the case and a lot of the Pii had no CPU fan. Most Pii CPUs ran passive or mostly passive so a bigger cooler was needed. Finding a massive cooler on a older socket 5 Pentium and those things were what, 5-15w TDP at the most?
Now if you compere it to a mobile K6 yeah the Pii and 3 run far hotter,The K62 and 3 are around 15w TDP. but I don't think they would run so hot that it would be a problem in a laptop. A lot of modern laptop chips are in the 30 to 40w range.