VGN-NR

From VAIO Library

Overview

VAIO VGN-NR
VGN-NR in White

The Sony VAIO VGN-NR was a low end notebook released by Sony in 2007. It was designed to be used for basic internet tasks as well as office tasks. Being the successor to the VGN-N series, it was constructed entirely of plastic, and had an average cheap laptop build quality, albeit it did use magnesium to support the hinges, so these are built a bit better than other cheap laptops at the time.. The VGN-NR was available in a wide variety of colours, such as grey (most common), white, silver, chocolate brown and pink.

Detailed Specs

Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo, Celeron or Pentium Dual Core (Socket P, not soldered)

Graphics: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator X3100 or NVIDIA GeForce 8400M GT

Chipset: Intel GM/PM965 Express (800MHz)

VGN-NR
VGN-NR in Grey

Memory: DDR2 SDRAM PC2-5300 SO-DIMM (667MHz), not soldered, 2 slots, max 4GB (8GB unofficially), Standard 2GB

Display: 15.4" wide TFT WXGA (1280x800)

Storage: 160GB 2.5" HDD SATA 5400rpm

Weight: 2.9 kilograms

MSRP: around £549 to £699

Problems

The NVIDIA equipped NRs all have a very unfortunate problem. They contain a NVIDIA GeForce 8400M GT GPU. The NVIDIA 8 series of GPUs are known for their 100% failure rate because of a manufacturing problem from NVIDIA, and the NR is not an exception to that. All NVIDIA 8 series chips on every single NR is affected by this problem.

Symptoms of this problem are:

  • black screen when turning on the device (device is not booting up, it has not passed the power-on self-test)
  • artifacts on the display
  • not being able to successfully install GPU drivers
  • unable to boot into Linux (distros with proper GPU drivers)

There is no real permanent solution to this problem. One temporary solution would be a reflow, one more permanent but still temporary solution is a reball or chip replacement. However, all of these methods requires a precise hot air station, BGA No-Clean flux, and some experience (practicing on a junk board is a good start).

Daily Usage Today

The NR deals with office tasks and basic web browsing okay-ish. It can run your favourite office programs such as Microsoft PowerPoint and LibreOffice fairly well, including a selection of web pages, however it struggles with video playback and even normal webpages. It is highly recommended to run an old OS such as Windows XP or a lightweight Linux distribution such as Devuan or Lubuntu. With upgrades such as a Core 2 Duo T9300, 4GB RAM as well as an SSD, they are surprisingly usable today. The VGN-NR can usually be found for extremely cheap today, as these weren't very noteworthy VAIOs.

Resources

VGN-NR Recovery Disks

VGN-NR Disassembly

You can bypass the model checks of these discs by using SVRP.

Follow our guides to download and install drivers.

Credits

Inversenet Notebookcheck