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Sounds like an interesting idea, I doubt anybody has tried it. I nominate you to be the first, let us know how it goes.
Maybe a youtuber can give it a trySounds like an interesting idea, I doubt anybody has tried it. I nominate you to be the first, let us know how it goes.
The cpu is soldered in on the MCU board. Who's going to try to de-solder something like that and try to install something that only slightly faster when it gives also no benefits. It's not like you get the new updates.The Intel Atom chip Tesla uses is the Atom N450 using a BGA559. Being a Linux based operating system, why can't the chip be swapped out with a slightly faster BGA559 processor like a N475 chip or maybe even a 2 core N570 processor? Has anyone attempted this?
This. In the end, you'll still be stuck with an Atom processor.The cpu is soldered in on the MCU board. Who's going to try to de-solder something like that and try to install something that only slightly faster when it gives also no benefits. It's not like you get the new updates.
Googling hasn't told me what this brick emoji means. Can someone enlighten me?
Googling hasn't told me what this brick emoji means. Can someone enlighten me?
Googling hasn't told me what this brick emoji means. Can someone enlighten me?
I’m hoping the new roadster uses a vertical screen as the prototype did. That way you might be able to hack an entire Ryzen setup yourself, even if you have to dump the extra heat into the cabin because your legacy S/X doesn’t have a cooling loop. If Ryzen builds only ever release in horizontal UI, I doubt you’d even ever be able to try it.Still hoping that they offer a Ryzen retrofit in the future.
They do not.The Intel Atom chip Tesla uses is the Atom N450 using a BGA559
Highly likely that the ram chips can be desoldered and swapped for higher density ones. The question then becomes whether or not the Tesla UI is running in a virtualized environment and whether or not that ram can actually be utilized. As for a better CPU, very unlikely that it is socketed, and even so or if you could resolder a better CPU of the same platform, the MCU probably has some sort of hardware check which would prevent unauthorized modification of the hardware. All speculation, but if there were such obvious ways to do something akin to that I believe jailbreaking Teslas would be somewhat popular.I’m hoping the new roadster uses a vertical screen as the prototype did. That way you might be able to hack an entire Ryzen setup yourself, even if you have to dump the extra heat into the cabin because your legacy S/X doesn’t have a cooling loop. If Ryzen builds only ever release in horizontal UI, I doubt you’d even ever be able to try it.
As for an official Tesla retrofit, that seems unlikely.
It shouldn’t be too tough to figure out which other Intel CPU chips are pin compatible with the current chipset. Maybe just as useful for a performance boost, it would be interesting to see what a doubling of memory would do, if someone decides to put the unit on a rework station and desolder/resolder chips.