Nitro 5 Models Supporting Additional SDD Drive? I’ve looking for comparison of size and AMD vs Intel

ALorenaE
ALorenaE Member Posts: 4 New User
edited January 2023 in Nitro Gaming

Hey all - I am looking for a new laptop and think the 17” Nitro 5s would be a good fit for me. I want to find one that can take my former laptop’s 2.5” SDD, but I’m having a hard time finding a list of models that are able to add a drive. I’ve seen the step-by-step that says it is possible, but I’ve also seen some folks on various forums saying that it isn’t possible with theirs and I’m a bit confused.

The two models I’ve been eyeing are the AN517-55-72R4 and the AN517-42-R6BL. I’ve looked at the comparison and it appears there aren’t a huge number of differences between the two, other than drive size and AMD vs Intel (which I’m still reading up on to see which is better for my uses - I’d love a smoother experience playing the ridiculousness that is Goat Simulator).

Any advice on where to find the list of models I could add this drive to would be lovely. Thanks, all.

[Edited the thread to add issue detail]

Answers

  • xperamis
    xperamis Member Posts: 87 Fixer WiFi Icon

    It's confirm that AN517-55-72R4 : Storage: 1 TB SSD | 2x M.2 Slots.

    The another model is only showing 512gb PCI SSD. (Double check it)

    Click on 'Yes' for the question on bottom , if youre happy with my answer❤️

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,474 Trailblazer
    edited January 2023

    What is your former laptops model number and manufacturer as that is important, what OS has it got also, is it an Acer as swapping boot drives from different brands might be a problem with the OS digital registration, as I've only swapped boot drives in Acer laptops that worked 100% and just adjusted their drivers perfectly and had no problems with the MS digital key of the OS, but I can't advise you if you take an M.2 boot drive from another manufacturer and put it into an Ace laptop. Usually swapping Win-10 and 11 drives from similar laptops with similar chipsets is no problem even 2 to 3 gen higher chipsets should work as Win-10 is very adaptable in my experience, so you wil have to take the gamble or clone the drive from your laptop onto the new AN517-55 or the AN517-42 M.2 drives as that is allot simpler and easier to do.

    With the AN517-55-72R4 and the AN517-42-R6BL imo I prefer Intel, but the AMD is championed by gamers but in a laptop the AMDs run hotter and they have no advantage, Intel graphics and driver support is allot better and both GPUs are the same at RTX3050Ti so imo you will get much better performance from the Intel with the NVidia, but I will leave it up to you, this one notable reviewers conclusion opinion "Bottom point, the Ryzen 7 6800H and the entire Ryzen 6000 hardware platform are competitive, well-balanced for demanding loads and daily use on battery, and theoretically more affordable than the Intel specs of 2022. At the same time, though, Intel’s 12th gen i7-12700H and the entire Alder Lake platform is the performance champion of the generation and are available in a wider range of notebooks". Its your choice and good luck and hope this has helped you out.

  • ALorenaE
    ALorenaE Member Posts: 4 New User

    My former laptop is a Dell Latitude e5470. My aim is to add it's 2.5" SSD as a secondary drive, not as the boot drive. I've done all sorts of parts swaps, so the actual process of doing the install doesn't intimidate me, but knowing if there is room in the case, connections for it, and if it will behave decently is. The last time I had a computer with two hard drives was...a long time ago and it was a desktop I'd built out of university surplus store parts.

    Thanks for all the advice on the Intel vs AMD, too - that's also super helpful!

  • ALorenaE
    ALorenaE Member Posts: 4 New User

    Thanks for this - the other one, I'd seen some folks on other sites talking about there being space in the case and a cable to add one, even though it doesn't come with it. I've definitely considered cloning the drive from my Dell onto the drive of a new machine, but it was a Windows/Linux dual boot and I know that can make things tricky if the drives are different sizes and I'd have to adjust partitions. Not wanting to deal with that mess is one of the reasons I'm looking for something I can possibly install it in.

    If it doesn't work, I have an external case and I can copy things over, just was hoping to be able to not have yet another external drive floating around the house.

    Thanks for confirming those specs!

  • xperamis
    xperamis Member Posts: 87 Fixer WiFi Icon

    You can simply clone your os using macrium reflect free.

    Click on 'Yes' for the question on bottom , if youre happy with my answer❤️

  • ALorenaE
    ALorenaE Member Posts: 4 New User

    I've cloned drives before, but not with that program. Does it allow for adjusting drive partitions?