I think my frist laptop was when Elite was still in Alpha. 40 50 fps. i7 720 with Dual ati 4870 and than upgraded to dual 5870.I've played Elite on three different laptops since the game launched so I can provide some comparisons in terms of what I've experienced with laptop performance.
My first gaming laptop that I used to play Elite is 6 years old. It's an ASUS ROG G75VX with a quad-core 3630qm i7 CPU and a 670MX GPU. It plays Elite fine on medium settings, generally 55-60 fps in space and 30-45 fps on planets. Temperatures rarely exceed 65-70C for the CPU and 60-65C for the GPU. The cooling is excellent which is typical for the ROG laptops and the fan noise is only moderate even after several hours of continuous gaming. The 670MX has quite decent overclocking potential and I can push the GPU performance around 20% higher using MSI afterburner if I were truly trying to maximize it. The cooling is good enough that the GPU temps are barely affected even with an overclock. Even in stock configuration it's still a decent system to run Elite and although the fps does tend to decrease somewhat on planets, especially near settlements, it is still quite playable.
This sounds like my Lenovo laptop The only spec change was I had the 860. Same temps until the fan started going bad. But had Avg 60 fps and Planets around 35 45 fps.My second laptop is in theory slightly more capable and is 4 years old. It's an ASUS N550JK with a quad-core 4700hq i7 CPU and an 850M GPU. It has similar overall performance to the G75VX and gets similar fps when running on medium settings. Unfortunately the cooling on this laptop is nowhere near as efficient and I routinely see temperatures of 70-80C for the CPU and 65-70C for the GPU. The fan noise is also much higher and will frequently ramp up to keep the temps down. One of the issues with this system is that the integrated graphics can't be completely disabled because the 850M is designed to work with Optimus and this doesn't help the CPU temps. There also isn't much room to overclock the 850M and this would also be limited by the cooling issues. Since this is a multimedia laptop rather than a ROG gaming laptop I suppose I can't be too critical of the cooling but in practice it is less useful for gaming than my older laptop despite the slightly better CPU/GPU specs, and I can probably get more performance out of the older laptop with overclocking and still run lower average temps.
My spec is about the same. Alienware laptop the only change is I have 1070. Getting around 95fps to 120 fps. The one thing I do like on the CPU it likes to overclock itself.My current laptop is a top-end gaming rig and is 6 months old. It's an ASUS G703GI with a hexa-core 8750h i7 CPU and a 1080 GPU with factory overclock. It's dramatically more capable than my other laptops but cooling is actually more of an issue than I expected. I run Elite on max/ultra settings on this system and get 60 fps continuously so performance isn't an issue (I could easily push the fps higher but I generally limit all my games to 60 fps for various reasons). The CPU temps average 60-70C with temperature spikes up to the mid-high 80C range. There is also a surprisingly large discrepancy between the cores of 10-12C, one core never seems to gets as hot as the others and one core tends to be the hottest among the group. Fan noise is moderate to high and occasionally the CPU temps hit the low-mid 90C range which is rather close to the TJmax of 100C. I suspect that the core temps are spiking intermittently before the fans can catch up because the average temps are rather moderate in comparison to the brief single-core temperature spikes. I'm not sure if it's an issue with the Coffee Lake processors having too much heat output to really be useful at full capacity in a laptop and I suspect my system would run into throttling issues if I were running a truly demanding game. The GPU temps are great however, 60-70C range, even with the 1080 factory overclock which I suspect has something to do with binning of the GPUs they use for the 1080 OC cards. There's also some issues with coil whine which is somewhat unavoidable with having that many high-performance components in a laptop. It's a great gaming laptop in many ways, between the hexa-core i7 and 1080 GPU with factory overclock and dual 760p SSDs in Raid 0 it has excellent performance, but I think trying to fit so many powerful components crammed into a laptop is starting to become an issue when trying to get the maximum performance out of them.
I think the issue they have right now is the 2080 GPU seems to have some issue.I have been using laptops exclusively for several years now due to the portability being important for my travel schedule but my next system might be a desktop because they seem to have hit a limit of what you can reasonably cram into a laptop chassis without substantial power/cooling/throttling issues. For the most part even my 6 year old laptop is still running Elite fine at medium settings and my current gaming system can easily run Elite at maximum settings so I shouldn't need to upgrade anything for several more years. That should give me some time to see if they manage to solve some of the design limitations with the current generation of gaming laptops before I decide if I will go with a desktop for my next system.
I think my frist laptop was when Elite was still in Alpha. 40 50 fps. i7 720 with Dual ati 4870 and than upgraded to dual 5870.
This sounds like my Lenovo laptop The only spec change was I had the 860. Same temps until the fan started going bad. But had Avg 60 fps and Planets around 35 45 fps.
My spec is about the same. Alienware laptop the only change is I have 1070. Getting around 95fps to 120 fps. The one thing I do like on the CPU it likes to overclock itself.
I think the issue they have right now is the 2080 GPU seems to have some issue.
I have not tried VR yet. I want to wait a few years and see if people have eye issues with it. I use the IRtracker and now Tobii Eye tracker built in my laptop. It kinda cool.I've found that Elite is still surprisingly playable even with older systems. It also helped that the resolution I used on my G75VX gaming laptop was 1600x900 (i.e., 900p) rather than 1920x1080, which probably helped the fps somewhat. Since I usually had it connected to an external monitor/speakers/keyboard the resolution wasn't an issue and I generally didn't notice any blurriness despite not running it at native resolution. I did however notice that the fps I got on planets started to drop since Elite first launched and the 670MX also wasn't powerful enough for a VR setup so it was starting to limit me somewhat. That was one of the reasons I haven't tried Elite in VR yet despite everyone saying how great it is, the other main reason being that I'm not a fan of the bulky/heavy VR headsets and prefer to alt-tab and multitask when playing Elite.
LOL I had Alienware send me faulty Laptops from 2007 to 2011 so that was 3 laptops. Everything to heat so Bluescreen of death. Then I had an Atnt Warrantee on it and was replaced by the Lenovo laptop in 2013 when the last one died. So my current laptop was the first laptop 2018 I paid for in 11 years. I not sure if I am lucky or not.[The main advantage of my N550JK was the portability (it was considerably smaller and lighter than my G75VX) and it had a nice aluminum casing/lid design which was very scratch resistant. It could get slightly better performance than my G75VX and I usually ran it at 1920x1080 resolution since I didn't use it with an external monitor. Unfortunately the temperature and fan noise really limited the laptop as a gaming rig. There was also the issue that I was using it as a work/school laptop I eventually dropped it from desk-height within the first year causing rather extensive damage. I sent it in for RMA warranty repair (ASUS has an amazing accidental damage warranty within the first year) where they replaced the fans, thermals, optical drive and replaced the lid. When I got it back it still had a noticeable vibration and noise which I eventually discovered was the HDD and replaced at my own expense. Now it's running well again and after I swapped out the original HDD for a Samsung 850 EVO SSD it's very fast and quiet. Still has high temps and fan noise though which is why it never replaced my older G75VX laptop as my main system.
Your SSD has no moving parts so that will not make any sounds. If it running loud best suggestion is send it back for repairs. They might check your heatsink and thermal grease. A good website for this is notebookreview. They talk about using Copper plates or different types of thermal Grease to drop the temps. Also types of laptop coolers you can put under the laptop.My CPU's overclocking in turbo mode seems to be the main cause of my current system's rather noticeable coil whine. Whenever the CPU hits maximum turbo clocks it has a noticeable coil whine noise and there also seems to be a coil whine associated with heavy SSD load as well. The only "hard" fix that I've found for this is to disable the turbo entirely by setting the maximum processor state to 99% which is not an acceptable solution so I just tolerate the noise. When the system is under heavy load the fans are generally loud enough that it isn't as noticeable. I have been considering sending it in for RMA as it's under warrant for the first year but apparently this is a common issue with the 8750h i7 CPUs and there is a good chance that sending it for RMA would either cause damage from shipping or possibly leave me with a worse situation, i.e., if they replace new parts with a refurbished ones and the noise is unchanged or worse. The noise itself isn't much of an issue, I'm actually more concerned about the temperature difference between the cores but that also seems to be common with the 8750h CPUs as well. It doesn't seem to relate to poor contact/thermal paste from what I've read so I also don't really want to send it is only to have them do a sub-par repaste on it. Apparently the i9 8950hk has even worse issues with coil whine and throttling than the 8750h although since the i9 is factory unlocked in theory you could try undervolting or reducing the turbo clocks to get around them.
Well I would have stayed with the Lenovo but had fan issues. So I had to upgrade in 2018.Before I purchased my current system I was considering waiting for the next version of my current laptop except with a 2080 GPU but according to the benchmarking the performance gains are rather modest with a noticeably higher TDP, heat output and price. Apparently there aren't many new games that are being designed to use the RTX features and they are quite intensive to utilize anyways so the 1080 seemed like a better value at the time I got my current laptop about 6 months ago. I will probably skip the 2080 entirely and see what NVIDIA does for the next generation GPUs. They are about to release the 1660 which looks really interesting in terms of performance to value ratio. I am hoping they will develop the 1600 series into a more power-efficient GPU and release a 1680 GTX version at some point as an alternative to the 2080 RTX. That would probably considerably a better value than the 2080 for most games but I'm not sure if NVIDIA is going to want to see a potential 1680 take away market share from the 2080. Sort of like how Porsche didn't offer the Cayman with a turbo because this would have potentially cut into sales of the base-model naturally-aspirated Carrera.
I have not tried VR yet. I want to wait a few years and see if people have eye issues with it. I use the IRtracker and now Tobii Eye tracker built in my laptop. It kinda cool.
LOL I had Alienware send me faulty Laptops from 2007 to 2011 so that was 3 laptops. Everything to heat so Bluescreen of death. Then I had an Atnt Warrantee on it and was replaced by the Lenovo laptop in 2013 when the last one died. So my current laptop was the first laptop 2018 I paid for in 11 years. I not sure if I am lucky or not.
Your SSD has no moving parts so that will not make any sounds. If it running loud best suggestion is send it back for repairs.
They might check your heatsink and thermal grease. A good website for this is notebookreview. They talk about using Copper plates or different types of thermal Grease to drop the temps. Also types of laptop coolers you can put under the laptop.
Well I would have stayed with the Lenovo but had fan issues. So I had to upgrade in 2018.
LOL I think we are getting off topic because the Op asking for a decent laptop and we are talking about high end systems![]()
Been selling some audio gear and power tools and I was thinking about getting some kind of gaming laptop to play ED at 1080p smoothly, nothing fancy like ultra settings or AA enabled.
Anyone here got some experience running ED on older laptops?
I used to have a spare pc with q9650 and gtx550ti and it ran ok, haven't tried my very old pentium D with radeon hd 5450 but i guess that won't even boot.
The best thing you can do is set a budget and see what you can get. Personally I'd avoid playing on integrated graphics as they are (in my opinion) next to useless.
Youd be better off getting a console then a low end laptop.
there are older alternatives with gtx980 or gtx680 alikes or hd 7950....
$1200 is not what i call low end but ok.
An Acer 5740G. Lol
I'm just looking for some 2-300 € laptop that is able to casually play elite