SSD Compatibility Swift 3 SF315-51g 36xz

patrickpeter
patrickpeter Member Posts: 5 New User
edited December 2021 in Swift and Spin Series
I just installed my transend M.2 SSD 820s SATA III 120GB in my Acer Swift 3 SF315-51g 36xz. It cant be detected ny BIOS as a boot device.

Answers

  • Hi,
    You have two M.2 SSD slots in your model,one slot supports M.2 NVMe SSD only and the other supports M.2 SATA SSD only, so, I would suggest you try using the other slot.
    https://community.acer.com/en/discussion/577151/does-my-acer-swift-3-sf315-51g-36xz-support-the-ssd-m-2-and-ram-upgrade
  • patrickpeter
    patrickpeter Member Posts: 5 New User
    It already show up in my file manager, but I wanted to set it up as my booting driver
  • Do you have another drive in the laptop? If so, remove it and reboot and see whether the laptop boots from this drive, please provide more details with pictures, like Disk Management pictures, File explorer pictures, thanks.
  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,912 Trailblazer
    You will need to clone the existing drive to the new one before you start with brummyfan2's recommendation. You have to have the various partitions there in order to boot from it. Once the cloning is done and you are booting from the SSD you will be able to wipe the old drive and convert it to a data drive.
    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.
  • patrickpeter
    patrickpeter Member Posts: 5 New User
    Can you provide some steps? I cant understand any further. Please?
  • patrickpeter
    patrickpeter Member Posts: 5 New User

    It appears on my device manager, but it doesnt show up on my file manager

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,912 Trailblazer
    OK, the WD drive is your original 1TB HDD, the Transcend is the new SSD. With Windows booted you can run Disk Management to verify that both drives are recognized, but don't do anything with the SSD yet. Download and run an appropriate disk cloning software, I used Macrium Reflect last time. Whatever you choose should be free, don't bother purchasing it because you will typically only use it the once.
    Launch the cloning software and ask it to clone the 1TB HDD to the 120GB SSD. Needless to say it will need to shrink the C: partition in order to fit into the small drive. It should give you the same partitions as are shown in Disk Management, with the EFI and Recovery partitions the same size as the originals and the system partition shrunk to fit the drive. Once that process is complete reboot and go into the BIOS to verify that the Boot Menu is enabled. Save and exit the BIOS and use F12 to get the boot menu. On the boot menu choose the new SSD as your boot drive and allow the boot to continue. It should then have booted on the SSD. Once you verify that everything is still working you can use Disk Management again to wipe the partitions off the 1TB drive and create a single data partition. All done!
    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.
  • patrickpeter
    patrickpeter Member Posts: 5 New User
    Im sorry, I already reformat my OS and install it on my SSD but it didnt show up in my BIOS on priority boot but my laptop is faster now.
  • @patrickpeter
    Your SSD is shown against HDD0, the WD 1TB drive shown against HDD1 in Information tab, so I don't think you need to bother about the Boot tab, Windows Boot manager will handle it.