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mellbroooks

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Everything posted by mellbroooks

  1. For your workload—Corona Renderer, Photoshop, and definitely needing 64GB RAM—the best fit within your $3000 CAD budget is the Lenovo Legion 9i (16", 2023 or newer). It comes with a powerful Intel i9 processor (13980HX or newer), options for 64GB RAM, and a discrete RTX 4070 or 4080 GPU, which will serve you well long term. The 16" screen is high resolution and color accurate, important for your post-production work. Another solid option is the HP ZBook Fury 16 G10, a true mobile workstation with professional GPUs and great upgradeability, but it might stretch your budget a bit. The Framework Laptop is interesting because of its upgradeability and repairability, but currently, its CPU and GPU options aren’t quite strong enough for heavy 3D rendering work like yours. So, I’d recommend going with Lenovo Legion 9i for the best balance of CPU power, RAM capacity, GPU, and display quality. It’s portable enough for travel and powerful enough to handle your architectural visualization tasks smoothly.
  2. Hey there! Totally get where you're coming from — loud, inconsistent fans are one of the fastest ways to ruin an otherwise good gaming experience. Let’s break this down and get you something that doesn’t sound like a mini jet engine every time you launch a game. 🎯 What You’re Looking For: Efficient cooling without aggressive or erratic fan behavior Good thermal management design Preferably quieter fan profiles, or customizable ones Still capable of solid gaming performance 🔧 A few quick points first: The Lenovo Legion 5 is actually known for good thermals, but its fan curve can be quite aggressive. You're not alone in being annoyed by it. Many gaming laptops prioritize thermals over acoustics — but some brands handle this better than others. You might’ve already done this, but double-check your power mode and thermal profile in Vantage or BIOS — sometimes a quiet mode helps a lot. ✅ Recommended Gaming Laptops With Better Cooling Acoustics: 🔹 ASUS ROG Zephyrus G14 / G16 Excellent cooling system One of the quieter gaming laptops, especially in “Silent” or “Performance” mode Premium build, portable, still packs serious power Some models come with liquid metal cooling (Ryzen versions) 🔹 MSI Stealth 15/16 or MSI Pulse MSI has worked on making quieter cooling profiles lately Stealth models especially balance thermals and noise well Fan noise is usually more consistent and less "spin-up/spin-down" craziness 🔹 Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 / Helios 300 Solid cooling, but can be a bit louder under full load — BUT: PredatorSense software allows fine-tuning fan curves Known for reliability and decent acoustic control Custom fan profiles make a huge difference here 🔹 Gigabyte AERO (if you're open to gaming+creator hybrids) Designed for quiet operation under creative workloads Still handles gaming decently, especially the RTX models Thermals are more “balanced” than brute-force 🧠 Bonus Tips: Try using fan curve editors (some laptops support this in BIOS or with software like Armoury Crate / PredatorSense / MSI Center). Consider undervolting (if supported) — can reduce heat and noise significantly. Some users opt for external cooling pads, but a good internal thermal design will always beat those. ❌ What to Avoid: Anything with thin chassis + high TDP GPUs (unless it has vapor chamber cooling) Laptops with single-fan setups — not enough airflow, and they tend to run hot + noisy
  3. Given your current setup and expectations, it sounds like you need a true desktop replacement with serious power, reliability, and expansion options. Based on what you’ve described, a strong contender would be the Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 or the Dell Precision 7780. But if you want a specific model that checks almost every box — the Lenovo ThinkPad P1 Gen 6 with Intel i9-13900H, 64GB RAM, 4TB SSD (with a second slot), and RTX 4070 graphics is an excellent pick. Here's why: Performance: It's blazing fast, handles demanding tasks with ease, and supports dual NVMe SSDs — perfect for your current storage setup. Build & Cooling: Great thermals, especially compared to the XPS series which often suffers in that department. Magnesium alloy chassis keeps it sturdy without being bulky. Keyboard: Classic ThinkPad typing experience — tactile, accurate, and comfortable for long sessions (ideal since you type a lot). Display: 16" WQXGA (2560x1600) with 100% sRGB — bright, sharp, and a good compromise from 17” while staying portable. Ports: Includes multiple USB-C/Thunderbolt, HDMI, headphone jack, and SD card reader. You’ll also get ISV certifications if you ever dabble in professional creative or CAD software — even if you're not gaming, this type of machine will run cool and stable under heavy loads. If you’re leaning toward Dell again, the Precision 7780 (a business-grade cousin of the XPS 17) could be a better experience with much better thermals and pro-grade durability.
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