-
×InformationNeed Windows 11 help?Check documents on compatibility, FAQs, upgrade information and available fixes.
Windows 11 Support Center. -
-
×InformationNeed Windows 11 help?Check documents on compatibility, FAQs, upgrade information and available fixes.
Windows 11 Support Center. -
- HP Community
- Archived Topics
- Notebooks Archive
- Upgrading the graphics card in my HP G6

Create an account on the HP Community to personalize your profile and ask a question

01-25-2012
02:29 PM
- last edited on
02-21-2017
04:42 PM
by
OscarFuentes
Hi,
It's very unlikely you will be able to upgrade the video adapter as most ( even if described as dedicated ) are physically soldered to the Motherboard and as such, it's not an upgradeable component.
What is the full Model No. and Product No. of the notebook ( from the service tag underneath your notebook ) - see Here for a further explanation?
Regards,
DP-K
****Click the White thumb to say thanks****
****Please mark Accept As Solution if it solves your problem****
****I don't work for HP****
Windows Insider MVP
01-26-2012 01:39 PM
Hi,
Sorry, the Intel chip is integrated into the Motherboard and is definitely not upgradeable.
Best regards,
DP-K
****Click the White thumb to say thanks****
****Please mark Accept As Solution if it solves your problem****
****I don't work for HP****
Windows Insider MVP
01-26-2012 02:04 PM
Hi,
Other than tweaking a few of the game setting such as the fps, there is really not much you can do to improve the performance of the chip, it's simply not very powerful.
If you enjoy gaming on a notebook, you really need to look for a machine with a dedicated card, that has a good ammount of fast dedicated ram onboard - ie atleast 1Gb+ of dedicated ddr5 ram.
Regards,
DP-K
****Click the White thumb to say thanks****
****Please mark Accept As Solution if it solves your problem****
****I don't work for HP****
Windows Insider MVP
11-22-2012 07:57 PM
Hi
I've got the G6 - 1112SA with ATI 4250. Is this graphics / video upgrade possible?
I've seen 2 threads regarding intel chipsets, but I've got the AMD Phenom II X4 4gb RAM model
Many thanks for your time 🙂
11-23-2012 06:36 AM
No sorry. The same advice appies to your video chip. 99.5% of laptops have the video chip soldered directly onto the motherboard, whether the video is "integrated", "dedicated", or "switchable". There is just no upgrade path. When you buy a laptop you have to be thinking about whether you want to use it for gaming and ask a lot of questions. Unfortunately, there is a shortage of reliable information available at the point of sale about laptop graphics, and the manufacturers do not help by touting high theoretical video memory capacity for laptops, as if that makes any difference. A good rule of thumb is that anything that costs less than a thousand dollars is not likely to be any good for serious games, and paying over a thousand dollars is no guarantee it will game. It's all in the hardware.
