Can I upgrade laptop from HDD to sata sdd. I am using Aspire E5-553G

bily071
bily071 Member Posts: 5 New User
edited February 27 in Aspire Laptops

Hi all,

can I upgrade laptop from HDD to sata sdd. I am using Aspire E5-553G (Part Number: NX.XXXXX.XXX)

if possible, can I back up files with acer care center (like in this video:

[Edited the thread to add model number to the title and to add issue detail]

Best Answer

  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 12,877 Trailblazer
    Answer ✓

    Yes, you can replace the "spinner" HDD for a Sata-3 2.5" SSD like the Samsung 870 EVO Plus 1TB or larger. The easiest way to back-up and restore your HDD is with the W7 Image Backup option in W10-11. You need a larger backup USB drive then your HDD and open Control Panel, click on Backup and restore W7 (see picture) the USB backup drive will be detected and select On a hard disk (default). The entire HDD including the 3 volumes (recovery, C:/ and the hidden volume) will now be backed up as a VHD image file on the external backup drive. Will take <1 hour for 250GB data depending on your system. When the backup finished successfully it will ask if you want to make a Recovery Disk, insert a 20GB USB flash drive in another USB port and click Yes.

    Eject the external backup drive and USB flash drive the proper way in Taskbar "Safely Remove hardware" https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/safely-remove-hardware-in-windows-1ee6677d-4e6c-4359-efca-fd44b9cec369 Don't just unplug the Backup USB drive. You are now ready to replace the HDD for an SSD (if new the SSD will already be formatted for Windows). https://community.acer.com/en/kb/articles/8449 When the new SSD is installed insert the USB Recovery Disk in your laptop and boot to BIOS with F2, check that the new SSD is detected as HDD0 on the first Info page and in the BIOS Boot screen move the USB drive to the top of the Boot Devices list and save settings on exit BIOS.

    To restore your backup make sure both the backup drive and USB Recovery Disk are inserted and boot, follow the instructions on this link https://www.eightforums.com/threads/system-image-recovery-restore-image-on-computer-in-windows-8.9064/ Takes about 1 hour to restore the complete copy of your old HDD, nothing lost. IF you have questions ask here and put @Puraw at the top or send me a message.

    The beauty of the VHD image file on your backup drive is that you can mount it in Windows Explorer and browse and copy any file you want.

    You will get a lot of good advice on this forum to use 3rd-party programs like Macrium Reflect, etc. or use Samsung cloning software. but this Windows procedure is IMO the easiest and has been proven the most reliable way in 15 years to backup and restore, plus you have the Recovery Disk with WindowsRE on it that can be used to repair Windows and boot a laptop. 😉

Answers

  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 12,877 Trailblazer
    Answer ✓

    Yes, you can replace the "spinner" HDD for a Sata-3 2.5" SSD like the Samsung 870 EVO Plus 1TB or larger. The easiest way to back-up and restore your HDD is with the W7 Image Backup option in W10-11. You need a larger backup USB drive then your HDD and open Control Panel, click on Backup and restore W7 (see picture) the USB backup drive will be detected and select On a hard disk (default). The entire HDD including the 3 volumes (recovery, C:/ and the hidden volume) will now be backed up as a VHD image file on the external backup drive. Will take <1 hour for 250GB data depending on your system. When the backup finished successfully it will ask if you want to make a Recovery Disk, insert a 20GB USB flash drive in another USB port and click Yes.

    Eject the external backup drive and USB flash drive the proper way in Taskbar "Safely Remove hardware" https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/safely-remove-hardware-in-windows-1ee6677d-4e6c-4359-efca-fd44b9cec369 Don't just unplug the Backup USB drive. You are now ready to replace the HDD for an SSD (if new the SSD will already be formatted for Windows). https://community.acer.com/en/kb/articles/8449 When the new SSD is installed insert the USB Recovery Disk in your laptop and boot to BIOS with F2, check that the new SSD is detected as HDD0 on the first Info page and in the BIOS Boot screen move the USB drive to the top of the Boot Devices list and save settings on exit BIOS.

    To restore your backup make sure both the backup drive and USB Recovery Disk are inserted and boot, follow the instructions on this link https://www.eightforums.com/threads/system-image-recovery-restore-image-on-computer-in-windows-8.9064/ Takes about 1 hour to restore the complete copy of your old HDD, nothing lost. IF you have questions ask here and put @Puraw at the top or send me a message.

    The beauty of the VHD image file on your backup drive is that you can mount it in Windows Explorer and browse and copy any file you want.

    You will get a lot of good advice on this forum to use 3rd-party programs like Macrium Reflect, etc. or use Samsung cloning software. but this Windows procedure is IMO the easiest and has been proven the most reliable way in 15 years to backup and restore, plus you have the Recovery Disk with WindowsRE on it that can be used to repair Windows and boot a laptop. 😉

  • bily071
    bily071 Member Posts: 5 New User

    Thx Puraw 🙏, never did this before and laptop is old so I'm not sure about anything

  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 12,877 Trailblazer
    edited February 26

    You are welcome, I tried most backup freeware (including Macrium Reflect when it was still free) and found EaseUS-Todo and W7 the best method, never tried to clone a drive and prefer the VHD image format as you can mount that file with Windows Explorer while with other BU software you need special mounting programs. With 3rd-party BU programs you also end up with many different USB recovery drives (confusing) so I recommend using W7 Image backup in W10-11, not for file backup or separate incremental volume BU, that does not work properly (not recommended), just back up the entire drive each month after a Windows Update or uninstalling Windows apps. Also make sure you have the automatic System restore feature enabled in Windows allocated with sufficient disk space.