iFixit is honestly terrible with these rankings. They seem to be based completely on how easy they are to take apart and reassemble, and nothing to do with availability or cost of components, or whether the components themselves are serialized.
So, we primarily award points for replacement parts priced at 25% of MSRP or less (exclusive of tax and shipping, because those vary regionally).
As a historical aside, although we’ve had our eye on this for a while, we only formally added replacement parts to the iFixit scorecard fairly recently—it’s factored in for many (but not all) of the devices we scored during the past year. We’re updating how repairability scores are displayed to help make that distinction clear.
Their job is to sell tools to fix stuff, did you even read the ars article, it’s just clickbait. Lenovo failed because they didn’t provide repairability score for their laptop models. nothing to do with if it’s actual repairable or not.
I’ve repaired Lenovo before, aftermarket items all available, change screens, keyboard, battery, simple stuff only though, no issues, everything is designed so it’s easy to change.
I would not say the same about HP or DELL, shit enterprise laptops, and the consumer ones are worse.
Yeah. I can say the same about most HP laptops starting with pro.
Yet my oldest still on use laptop is HP EliteBook 2560p is quite the different.
The bottom cover opens completely without screw driver and even the cpu fan in it’s entirety is out in the open to be able to clean every now and then.
iFixit is honestly terrible with these rankings. They seem to be based completely on how easy they are to take apart and reassemble, and nothing to do with availability or cost of components, or whether the components themselves are serialized.
https://www.ifixit.com/News/75533/how-ifixit-scores-repairability
Well it’s good to know that they added that. But don’t the OEMs decide what MSRP is?
Their job is to sell tools to fix stuff, did you even read the ars article, it’s just clickbait. Lenovo failed because they didn’t provide repairability score for their laptop models. nothing to do with if it’s actual repairable or not.
I’ve repaired Lenovo before, aftermarket items all available, change screens, keyboard, battery, simple stuff only though, no issues, everything is designed so it’s easy to change.
I would not say the same about HP or DELL, shit enterprise laptops, and the consumer ones are worse.
Yeah. I can say the same about most HP laptops starting with pro.
Yet my oldest still on use laptop is HP EliteBook 2560p is quite the different. The bottom cover opens completely without screw driver and even the cpu fan in it’s entirety is out in the open to be able to clean every now and then.
And?
The article was not relevant to my statement.
I wasn’t talking about Lenovo.