Has anyone bought some of the components (e.g. a hard drive or RAM) somewhere else instead of buying the full laptop from the frame.work website?

Was is worth it?

Looks like an easy possibility to save a few hundred dollars/euros…

Just curious…

  • somenonewho@feddit.de
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    1 年前

    Yeah got the framework 13 AMD end of last year. Bought the ram separately (crucial) and used an NVME I had lying around. The RAM was cheaper this way.

    • Zectivi
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      11 个月前

      I did the same for the AMD 13 I bought 2 weeks ago. Saved about 140 USD on both the 32GB ram (Crucial DDR5-5600) and the 1TB ssd (SN850X)

  • SomeBoyo@feddit.de
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    1 年前

    Yes, this worked out well for me. Was able to get 32GB of RAM instead of 16GB and more storage for about the same amount. Just follow the parameters they provide.

  • recursive_recursion [they/them]@programming.dev
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    1 年前

    For answering your question on if it’s worth buying components seperately:

    I’d say it probably depends on your use case situation and the regions you can buy components from.

    Pricing out a FL16 for my use case of a workstation/gaming hybrid in Canada I would save approx a range of $400 - $200 CAD if I were to buy the storage (1` and 2nd) and RAM(DDR5 64Gb) seperately.

    Again the pricing of components varies based on each person’s wants and regional pricing (&sale prices)

    for figuring the price differences/potential savings I’d recommend using a site like pcpartpicker.com and changing the region. From there you can figure out if it’s worth buying the full bundle from Framework or buying individually

  • Contramuffin@lemmy.world
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    1 年前

    Buying components doesn’t really save you much money over just buying it from Framework - I’ve tried to come up with different configurations on their product select page and it seems to always come out to approximately the same cost as buying components separately. I think the main appeal of opting out of a component on the product select page is primarily so that you can reuse a component if you already have it

    If you mean that you want to buy a DIY system vs. a pre-built Framework, then yes, it’ll save you a couple hundred dollars

  • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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    1 年前

    You could save some.

    With that said, if you’re short on cash and you’re contemplating whether you can afford a Framework by saving on these parts, you might be able to save a lot more by getting an off-lease ThinkPad, Latitude or even B-stock Framework. For example I just got a Latitude 7400 yesterday for $250. It’s got 16GB of RAM and a 500GB SSD.

    • ComprehensiveSwitch@lemmy.world
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      11 个月前

      eh. it’s also a matter of getting better parts.

      Just ordered my DIY AMD 13 and picked up an Sk hynix P41 1TB for $85 from microcenter–Framework wants $100 for a slower SN770. Same deal with RAM: picked up 32GB of Crucial DDR5-5600 for $96, whereas Framework wants $160.

      I’m not knocking Framework here at all, because I know they have their own overhead here and it’s convenient to get RAM in the package. But this is one advantage of their DIY model I really appreciate–$75 price difference for better parts is well worth it.