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[Refurb] Dell Latitude 7390 Touch, Core i5-8350u 16GB RAM 250GB SSD Win11Pro 1-Yr Wty $360 Delivered @ Computer & Laptop Sales

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Processor Intel Core i5-8350U (8th generation)
RAM 8GB DDR4 RAM
Storage 250GB SSD NVME (Solid State Drive)
Operating System Windows 11 Pro
Warranty 1 Year (Battery [Brand NEW] and charger [Used] cover 1 month only)
Display 13.3-inch Full HD (1920 x 1080) touch screen
Graphics Integrated Intel UHD Graphics 620
Ports Various ports including USB Type-C, USB 3.1, HDMI, Ethernet, and more.
Wireless Wi-Fi 802.11ac, Bluetooth
Battery Typically a 3-cell or 4-cell battery for extended usage
Keyboard Full-size backlit keyboard
Security Fingerprint reader, optional smart card reader, TPM (Trusted Platform Module), and various security features.

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closed Comments

  • +1

    Title says 16Gb RAM, description and website say 8Gb RAM????

  • +1

    what's the min battery % we can expect?

    • +1

      We installed Brand new batteries on them

      • +1

        OEM batteries or 3rd party (where capacity/runtime is at best 70% of OEM)?

        Mind you chemical breakdown from sitting on a shelf or in a box, on "new" OEM batteries would probably average out the same…

        • Third party batteries. Wouldn't be cost effective for OEM, they would probably lose money

      • Just so people know what they're getting, are the new batteries 3-cell 42W/hr or 4-cell 60W/hr ?

      • +2

        With a one month guarantee on the new battery. You must really trust them.

  • It was $254.15 in October through another seller.

    Anyway to get more SSD?

  • +5
    • I was viewing the link you posted. From <10 to >90 viewers in just 10 mins span.

    • Grade B though

    • Nice find. Thanks for putting that up for comparison.

    • OOS

  • steep for a 6 and half year old laptop

  • Purchased a 2in1 4G/LTE 7390 with the same specs recently for $306 from ebay, tasty little device in new condition with a 60 Wh 4-Cell battery @ 87%…

    This price doesn't look too great but I guess a new battery adds a bit of value…

    • Link?

      • Sold out sorry, the listing has been recycled for non-LTE ones at the same price:
        https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/305182025087

        (Same as any refurb or used lappies, make contact and confirm battery condition before purchasing)

  • +7

    Reposting my usual 8th Gen Thermal Throttling info (im an 8th Gen owner, laptop and desktop, so not throwing shade here, just awareness)

    https://www.ozbargain.com.au/comment/14429355/redir

    • Is there realistically many scenarios this will be relevant given the majority of assumed use for this form factor? Most people aren't doing graphics or processor intense applications beyond Youtube & spreadsheets.

      Edit: your points re: 8th Gen are still valid, don't get me wrong.

      • Still throttles in normal use…..

        In my experience they benefit from a repaste at bare minimum

        • Can't argue against a repaste. Maybe I'm not pushing mine (refurb x360 G6) hard enough but haven't noticed any performance issues when doing light tasks, even playing CSGO, it's an 8th gen i7.

          • +1

            @Ham Dragon: Different manufacturers also edit thermal tables and CPU TDP in BIOS as workarounds, so maybe HP did so and you have slightly more headroom. I know my Asus 8th Gen is pretty conservative on that front, and hard limited to about 22W from memory (throttlestop and stability testing). The upper limit was about 25W

    • +1

      Ooh thanks, very useful. I just got one of these similar 8th gen dells from a posting a few weeks back, and happen to have a tube of thermal paste burning a hole in my drawer, so will give it a go

      • +1

        regardless of brand etc, any laptop i get in that more than 2 years old gets a repaste as part of general maintenance, its just that these Gen 8 CPU's (generally) really do benefit from a repaste - the more heat you get out of the CPU package the higher and more consistent the clock speed

        i have swapped my desktop over to Honeywell PTM7950 Phase Change Thermal Pads/Sheets for testing (now that the prices have come down after a Linus Tax after he covered it on his youtube channel), but havent gotten around to doing my laptop yet. On the desktop at least its comparable with thermal paste, but since it doesnt change phase (become gooey) till 45s, its negligible to tell any difference below that, and i havent had a chance to really push it yet, too busy to game etc. . Ill get around to testing it on the laptop now during summer and see if it makes any noticeable difference there…

        you can usually find a disassembly guide/video by googling your model or looking on ifixit.com, for Dell's theres also sometimes a disassembly guide available from the support section

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