Can I add in NVMe 1T in open port on Nitro 5 AN515-55-59KS ?

wtchywmn9
wtchywmn9 Member Posts: 3 New User
Old lady and gaming newbie here, so please be gentle.  :)   

So my 10 year old Toshiba is on its last legs and my son talked me into buying a Nitro 5 AN515-55-59KS so he could teach me gaming.  I like the Nitro, but I need a large size hard drive because I do a lot of photography and use PhotoShop and its related programs, which takes up a bunch of drive space.  The drive it came with is an NVMe, but only around 250GB.  I want to add in a 1T NVMe drive in the extra port. How do I go about finding out if this model can accommodate it?  I know it will accommodate a SATA SSD because they included a connector.  Just not sure about the NVMe connection.  (As you may have guessed by the age of my old laptop, a lot has changed since I bought it, and I'm on a steep learning curve about the new technology.)

Would also appreciate any suggestions about which NVMe brands are good and will fit the Nitro 5.

Many thanks.

Best Answers

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,747 Trailblazer
    edited March 2021 Answer ✓
    wtchywmn9 said:
    Old lady and gaming newbie here, so please be gentle.  :)   

    So my 10 year old Toshiba is on its last legs and my son talked me into buying a Nitro 5 AN515-55-59KS so he could teach me gaming.  I like the Nitro, but I need a large size hard drive because I do a lot of photography and use PhotoShop and its related programs, which takes up a bunch of drive space.  The drive it came with is an NVMe, but only around 250GB.  I want to add in a 1T NVMe drive in the extra port. How do I go about finding out if this model can accommodate it?  I know it will accommodate a SATA SSD because they included a connector.  Just not sure about the NVMe connection.  (As you may have guessed by the age of my old laptop, a lot has changed since I bought it, and I'm on a steep learning curve about the new technology.)

    Would also appreciate any suggestions about which NVMe brands are good and will fit the Nitro 5.

    Many thanks.

    Have a look here for the disassembly guide of your Acer Nitro 5 (AN515-55) which should solve your problem. Btw your Nitro 5 has 2x M2 slots PCIe NVMe and one SATA SSD 2.5".

    Note: this is a very easy process if you are willing to open a brand new laptop and this is especially applicable and questionable if ‘you know what you and have the skills to do this’? As and if your AN515-55 is under warranty and brand new, opening your laptop does nt void the warranty but, be very very careful not to break any components when opening the back case and/or break any warranty labels and/or touch anything else when adding an M.2 NVMe drive. See below as that is the M.2 connector for that extra drive.


    M.2 slot on mainboard


    Type "M" key edge connector (make sure its got the 5 pins wide) M.2 


  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,747 Trailblazer
    edited March 2021 Answer ✓
    wtchywmn9 said:
    Thanks, StevenGen.  This is very helpful.  

    Does it matter what generation it is? Watching a video that says the newest is 4th generation, and that it's backwards compatible with 3rd generation.  As I said, I'm on a steep learning curve.  I want to get the most up to date so I don't have to upgrade anything for a good while.

    Firstly, the 4th Gen M.2 NVMe might be slot compatible with a 3rd Gen but it won't perform the same as it depends on the bus speed capacity. This is not the same between 3rd and 4th Gen GPU's, as they are completely different and a 3rd Gen wont fit into a 4th Gen slot, as you can see on the new desktop motherboards today. The 4th Gen M.2 NVMe's need a 4th Gen PCIe bus that can utilise the 4th Gen speed and software, yes they are the same slot and the two can fit but won't perform the same. The specs of the 4th Gen NVMe might be backward slot compatible but 'that is all it is' as a 3rd Gen bus (max 32 GB bandwidth) to a 4th Gen (max 64GB bandwidth) NVMe type M.2 won't perform the same, as you have waisted your money (but its useful for a future upgrade) especially if these drives are moe expensive and you can still get a 3rd Gen NVMe M.2 drives. This is also applicable and the same between SATA 2 (3 GB/s, 300 MB/s) and SATA 3 (6 GB/s, 600 MB/s) as the new SATAe has significantly higher speeds at 16 GB/s, 1.97 GB/s. Have a look at this article that explains it perfectly "PCIe 4 vs PCIe 3: Do you need Gen 4 in 2020". Good luck and hope this helps. 




Answers

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,747 Trailblazer
    edited March 2021 Answer ✓
    wtchywmn9 said:
    Old lady and gaming newbie here, so please be gentle.  :)   

    So my 10 year old Toshiba is on its last legs and my son talked me into buying a Nitro 5 AN515-55-59KS so he could teach me gaming.  I like the Nitro, but I need a large size hard drive because I do a lot of photography and use PhotoShop and its related programs, which takes up a bunch of drive space.  The drive it came with is an NVMe, but only around 250GB.  I want to add in a 1T NVMe drive in the extra port. How do I go about finding out if this model can accommodate it?  I know it will accommodate a SATA SSD because they included a connector.  Just not sure about the NVMe connection.  (As you may have guessed by the age of my old laptop, a lot has changed since I bought it, and I'm on a steep learning curve about the new technology.)

    Would also appreciate any suggestions about which NVMe brands are good and will fit the Nitro 5.

    Many thanks.

    Have a look here for the disassembly guide of your Acer Nitro 5 (AN515-55) which should solve your problem. Btw your Nitro 5 has 2x M2 slots PCIe NVMe and one SATA SSD 2.5".

    Note: this is a very easy process if you are willing to open a brand new laptop and this is especially applicable and questionable if ‘you know what you and have the skills to do this’? As and if your AN515-55 is under warranty and brand new, opening your laptop does nt void the warranty but, be very very careful not to break any components when opening the back case and/or break any warranty labels and/or touch anything else when adding an M.2 NVMe drive. See below as that is the M.2 connector for that extra drive.


    M.2 slot on mainboard


    Type "M" key edge connector (make sure its got the 5 pins wide) M.2 


  • wtchywmn9
    wtchywmn9 Member Posts: 3 New User
    Thanks, StevenGen.  This is very helpful.  

    Does it matter what generation it is? Watching a video that says the newest is 4th generation, and that it's backwards compatible with 3rd generation.  As I said, I'm on a steep learning curve.  I want to get the most up to date so I don't have to upgrade anything for a good while.
  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,747 Trailblazer
    edited March 2021 Answer ✓
    wtchywmn9 said:
    Thanks, StevenGen.  This is very helpful.  

    Does it matter what generation it is? Watching a video that says the newest is 4th generation, and that it's backwards compatible with 3rd generation.  As I said, I'm on a steep learning curve.  I want to get the most up to date so I don't have to upgrade anything for a good while.

    Firstly, the 4th Gen M.2 NVMe might be slot compatible with a 3rd Gen but it won't perform the same as it depends on the bus speed capacity. This is not the same between 3rd and 4th Gen GPU's, as they are completely different and a 3rd Gen wont fit into a 4th Gen slot, as you can see on the new desktop motherboards today. The 4th Gen M.2 NVMe's need a 4th Gen PCIe bus that can utilise the 4th Gen speed and software, yes they are the same slot and the two can fit but won't perform the same. The specs of the 4th Gen NVMe might be backward slot compatible but 'that is all it is' as a 3rd Gen bus (max 32 GB bandwidth) to a 4th Gen (max 64GB bandwidth) NVMe type M.2 won't perform the same, as you have waisted your money (but its useful for a future upgrade) especially if these drives are moe expensive and you can still get a 3rd Gen NVMe M.2 drives. This is also applicable and the same between SATA 2 (3 GB/s, 300 MB/s) and SATA 3 (6 GB/s, 600 MB/s) as the new SATAe has significantly higher speeds at 16 GB/s, 1.97 GB/s. Have a look at this article that explains it perfectly "PCIe 4 vs PCIe 3: Do you need Gen 4 in 2020". Good luck and hope this helps. 




  • wtchywmn9
    wtchywmn9 Member Posts: 3 New User
    Thanks again, SteveGen.  Your replies have been so helpful. GREATLY appreciated!