Replacing Hard Drive with SATA SSD on Aspire 3910. What cables do I need?

maxgarcia
maxgarcia Member Posts: 28 Enthusiast WiFi Icon

I am replacing my internal hard drive with a SATA SSD boot drive on my ASPIRE 3910 Desktop.

And I am looking for information on what cables do I need as well Free software that I can use for the process of cloning the new Samsung EVO SSD drive.

anyone have any ideas?

thanks

[Edited the thread to add issue detail to the title]

Answers

  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 13,334 Trailblazer

    Hi, this is a 2010 Desktop that may run on an earlier version of Windows10, I would use an external backup drive that is larger than your boot drive and use Windows7 Backup-Image creator that you can find in Control Panel. After it created the VHD image file the program will offer to make a Windows Recovery drive (USB flash drive +10GB) that you can use to repair or reset your Desktop and restore the backup from the external USB drive, The backed up VHD image file can also be mounted in Windows File Explorer (W10-W11) to browse or copy folders and files.

  • Larryodie
    Larryodie Member Posts: 1,678 Community Aficionado WiFi Icon

    Sometimes there are cables in a plastic bag in your computer box.

    I've always used Acronis Software.

    One note when you get it cloned then remove the 2nd drive until a successful boot is preformed.

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,206 Trailblazer

    Your existing drive has the correct cables for the new drive. The Aspire 3910 is old enough we don't have access to detailed specs on it, but IIRC it has only two SATA ports, one for the HDD and one for the DVD. It also has USB 2.0 ports, so the cloning process is likely to be slow. I'd get a cheap external SATA case, drop the new SSD into the case and use any of the free cloning apps (I used Macrium Reflect last time I did one) to clone the internal drive to the new SSD. Let it run overnight and it will likely be finished the next day. Did I say it's going to be slow on USB 2.0? :) That process will actually be faster than doing a backup/restore as suggested above.

    Once it's cloned, open the case, remove the existing HDD and put the SSD in it's place, you may need an adapter to go from 2.5" to 3.5". Put it all back together and it should boot (much faster) on the SSD. Run it for a while to make sure everything is still working fine, then put the old HDD in the external case and use Disk Management to wipe it and re-partition it as a data drive. You can likely use it for backups, but only as overnight sessions for the same USB 2.0 reasons. Think seriously about picking up a newer machine…

    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.