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Making a laptop into a desktop

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    Making a laptop into a desktop

    I have a bit of a redneck engineering project going on. I cannot get any helpful advice from the "computer" people as apparently the red-neckery offends their sensibilities.....


    We are working to open an office at our shop location. The building is "secured" with a burg system and some cameras, but am highly concerned about theft. In light of that the first run of computer equipment for the shop has been repurposed items and such that I can find on the cheap cheap. One of those is a convertible laptop. It's a Dell Inspiron 13 7375 with the Ryzen 5 2500u.

    Backstory on this is that I wanted some decoy equipment to put in place to see if it walked off. One of the ladies we work with had (the above) broken laptop and donated it to the cause. It was used as a step by a young child. The touchscreen and lid were destroyed, the chassis bent. I first saw it and thought "dead as disco". Well, it powered on.

    The display portion of the screen works but the touchscreen is being pressed thousands of times a second. I was able to safe mode my way to disabling the driver and then further wrote a registry entry blocking the hardware ID of the touch portion of the screen so that it wouldn't re-enable on updates. Seemingly worked well. Did some gluing, did some taping, reformatted the machine and been testing it the past couple of days.

    The other night it started throwing errors out of Support Assist telling me that the charging brick/battery/other power issues were ongoing. I found that removal of the display and touch cables took care of that, and further removal of the lid took care of it HAVING to have the lid opened to turn on, due to a hall sensor for lid position. As with modern laptops today, the WiFi cables were run through the lid around the edge. I cracked the lid back open, got those wires out and find that the only way they will get signal is if I route them out the spot where the hinge was and leave them dangling. I am concerned about damage to them and need to find a way to hide, protect, or replace them with something sturdy.

    I noted various WiFi antenna that use a couple of small pigtails that would go back to the M.2 key internally. I had considered modifying some pre existing product and/or hoping like hell there is some 3d printed solution that would allow me a bracket which I could then secure/glue into the previous hinge location. Open to any other idea along that line. Pictures or links of would be appreciated, if you are aware of anything.

    The computer won't be used as a "mobile" device any longer but I do need for the antenna to be secured to the lowers such that it can be moved without further breaking. Thanks in advance for any off the wall suggestions.
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    #2
    I'm Matt, and here on DIY Perks you'll find plenty of interesting projects on a variety of topics! Want help with a project? The official forum is a perfect place to start! Don't forget to help others out with your knowledge, too! https://forum.diyperks.com We also have a live-chat Discord server so you can talk DIY to like-minded individuals! Check it out! https://discord.gg/diyperks If you need to get in touch with Matt directly for sponsorship enquiries, fan mail, or just to say 'hi' (no project questions please) then send an email to diyperks@gmail.com


    this youtuber I follow has done a couple destroyed laptops into PC builds, might be a little (or a lot) further than you intended to go, but still interesting and in the same vein, might give you some ideas too.

    As far as antenna security goes, I'm a fan of hot glue for things like that. just hot gluing it along a non-essential edge or something. Could even 3D print a "false corner" for the cable to run under

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      #3
      Originally posted by moving_target View Post
      https://www.youtube.com/user/DIYPerks

      this youtuber I follow has done a couple destroyed laptops into PC builds, might be a little (or a lot) further than you intended to go, but still interesting and in the same vein, might give you some ideas too.

      As far as antenna security goes, I'm a fan of hot glue for things like that. just hot gluing it along a non-essential edge or something. Could even 3D print a "false corner" for the cable to run under
      I love watching that guy and others. Part of what inspired me for such.

      I am actually crawling thingyverse now just to see if anything jumps out at me.
      feedback

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        #4
        Not sure I followed everything... but if you have a working laptop board in a busted case you can simply transplant it into a new case. A box, open air, replacement laptop assembly, doesn't really matter too much.

        Some of the circuitry in a laptop like the battery leads are very delicate and there is often funkiness as far as component stacking, just be careful. Use stand-offs or foam or something to isolate the mainboard from the new housing.

        Hotglue is perfect for securing dangling wires.

        Again, just be cautious around the terminals, they will be exposed and some carry a good amount of power, zap.

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          #5
          Thanks much for the suggestions above, I have it worked out.




          I had an old d link router here which I took apart, stole and antenna, ferrule, and cabling from. I drilled out the Kensington Lock and put it inside there with a single ant. mounted out the back/side. It's getting great signal while within a room or two of the WiFi and the Bluetooth is working fine. I routed the 2nd cable back through the chassis away from the battery.




          I would call this experiment a success.
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            #6
            Click image for larger version

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              #7
              Awesome!

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                #8
                at looking at upgrading to new desktop some time. do not do laptop to desktop thing your going to hold your self back \

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                  #9
                  Lol, are you using TV as a desktop or it's just like a modem? Looks very weird to see a laptop without a display. One of my friends did something similar, connected his laptop to the TV because his screen was broken. In some situations, it was even better that with the original screen, but the most important thing is that he can buy rdp and do his job remotely, even with his scuffed device. He is gonna buy a new laptop soon, but until that moment, he will have to work like this, with TV as the main screen
                  Last edited by GraceGraham; 04-13-2021, 08:20 PM.

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                    #10
                    Originally posted by GraceGraham View Post
                    Lol, are you using TV as a desktop or it's just like a modem? Looks very weird to see a laptop without a display. One of my friends did something similar, connected his laptop to the TV because his screen was broken. In some situations, it was even better that with the original screen, but the most important thing is that he can buy rdp and do his job remotely, even with his scuffed device. He is gonna buy a new laptop soon, but until that moment, he will have to work like this, with TV as the main screen
                    Yes, this is the "desktop" that I use at our office. My primary concern there was theft so I didn't want to buy new for our initial few months. I am utilizing this machine mounted to the back of a 32" TV as the screen and it working acceptably well. The other machine that is being used there is an old Optiplex that was purchased for one of our office girls some years back. It had an i3 inside, so I swapped that for an i7 3770 I already had on hand, added some memory that I also already had, and an SSD. The two of them work acceptably well and are getting the job done just so long as you have a bit of patience with them (particularly the Optiplex) I have in mind to replace them and was looking to do so already but pricing is wonky right now.

                    The major advantage that I found from removing the lid had to do with the lid switch, mostly, aside from the small bits of glass coming out of the screen. I traded having to open/close the lid for just having to hit "C"ontinue for the BIOS error that comes up for not seeing it's display. I have been trying to find a 30 pin adapter I can use internally to trick the laptop into thinking it's screen was there, but it seems in my limited searching that those are only available for the "screen side" of that setup.
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