Acer Predator G1-710 M.2 upgrade limit

Siluq
Siluq Member Posts: 2 New User

Hi,
I’m experiencing an issue with my C drive being too small, and I’d like to upgrade it. Currently I’m using the standard drive that came with the system, the LITEON CV1-8B256. However the manual for the G1-710 states that it only supports drives up to 512GB.

I was wondering if it’s possible to use a 1TB or 2TB M.2 drive instead, or that it would really only supports up to 512GB.
Could you confirm whether larger capacities are supported?

Thank you in advance for your help!

Best Answers

  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 13,922 Trailblazer
    edited December 14 Answer ✓

    Hi, the Acer Predator G1-710, released in 2016, only supports M.2 Sata SSDs up to 1TB like the Sata-3 SSD Samsung 860 Evo. You could also upgrade the 2.5" Sata HDD with a 2.5" Sata-3 SSD like the Samsung 870 Evo V-NAND up to 2TB,

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,414 Trailblazer
    edited December 14 Answer ✓

    The Predator G1-710 desktops M.2 SSD drives are only limited by its format in a windows operating system environment which has the follows rules:

    • MBR/Legacy format - is limited to a max 2.2TB size drive
    • GUID (GPT) - is limited to 8 petabytes (1 petabyte = 1000TB)

    The Predator G1-710 as its specs state, can operate with a 2.5" or a 3.5" SATA 3 drive so there is no problem for this desktop to operate with an M.2 SSD Gen 3 x4 lane type 1TB or a 2TB type M.2 drive M.2, as the larger 4TB size M.2 SSDs (which are expensive and its not worth testing these drives out) have had a few problems with these old desktops and laptops and might not work, so to be safe and use the proven size drives like the 1TB and 2TB M.2 SSD drives, you can also use Gen 4 x4 lane M.2 type drives as they are backward compatible if they are cheaper, as they will work with the Predator G1-710 desktop perfectly also.

    My suggestion is that you use the quickest Gen 3 x4 lane M.2 SSD drive which is the Samsung 970 EVO Plus which runs at speed of read/write of up to 3500MB/s, which is what you desktops M.2 SSD lane is limited to. Btw, I've been using this 970 EVO Plus M.2 SSD for the last 2.5 years in an Nitro laptop and its a quick and very reliable drive for a Gen 3 x4, so I can recommend this drive 100%.

    Also be aware that Samsung has their own software called "Magician" that monitors the M.2 drive and its temps consistently, it can also update the firmware of the drive and test the drive speed, and this software can also do a clone with its "Data Migration" section, that you can clone your old LITEON CV1-8B256 M.2 SSD very easily onto the new Samsung M.2 SSD drive with an M.2 to USB-C adapter (that you can also use afterwards and put the old LITEON CV1-8B256) and use it as an external drive) then plug this adapter into the front USB-C port of the Predator G1-710 desktop and do a clone, be aware that cloning a drive with a USB-C port could take allot longer than if you clone an M.2 SSD drive in an internal m.2 slot of the mainboard internally, so be patient. Good luck and hope his helps.

    If this answers your question and solved your query please "Click on Yes" or "Click on Like" if you find my answer useful👍

Answers

  • Puraw
    Puraw ACE, Member Posts: 13,922 Trailblazer
    edited December 14 Answer ✓

    Hi, the Acer Predator G1-710, released in 2016, only supports M.2 Sata SSDs up to 1TB like the Sata-3 SSD Samsung 860 Evo. You could also upgrade the 2.5" Sata HDD with a 2.5" Sata-3 SSD like the Samsung 870 Evo V-NAND up to 2TB,

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,414 Trailblazer
    edited December 14 Answer ✓

    The Predator G1-710 desktops M.2 SSD drives are only limited by its format in a windows operating system environment which has the follows rules:

    • MBR/Legacy format - is limited to a max 2.2TB size drive
    • GUID (GPT) - is limited to 8 petabytes (1 petabyte = 1000TB)

    The Predator G1-710 as its specs state, can operate with a 2.5" or a 3.5" SATA 3 drive so there is no problem for this desktop to operate with an M.2 SSD Gen 3 x4 lane type 1TB or a 2TB type M.2 drive M.2, as the larger 4TB size M.2 SSDs (which are expensive and its not worth testing these drives out) have had a few problems with these old desktops and laptops and might not work, so to be safe and use the proven size drives like the 1TB and 2TB M.2 SSD drives, you can also use Gen 4 x4 lane M.2 type drives as they are backward compatible if they are cheaper, as they will work with the Predator G1-710 desktop perfectly also.

    My suggestion is that you use the quickest Gen 3 x4 lane M.2 SSD drive which is the Samsung 970 EVO Plus which runs at speed of read/write of up to 3500MB/s, which is what you desktops M.2 SSD lane is limited to. Btw, I've been using this 970 EVO Plus M.2 SSD for the last 2.5 years in an Nitro laptop and its a quick and very reliable drive for a Gen 3 x4, so I can recommend this drive 100%.

    Also be aware that Samsung has their own software called "Magician" that monitors the M.2 drive and its temps consistently, it can also update the firmware of the drive and test the drive speed, and this software can also do a clone with its "Data Migration" section, that you can clone your old LITEON CV1-8B256 M.2 SSD very easily onto the new Samsung M.2 SSD drive with an M.2 to USB-C adapter (that you can also use afterwards and put the old LITEON CV1-8B256) and use it as an external drive) then plug this adapter into the front USB-C port of the Predator G1-710 desktop and do a clone, be aware that cloning a drive with a USB-C port could take allot longer than if you clone an M.2 SSD drive in an internal m.2 slot of the mainboard internally, so be patient. Good luck and hope his helps.

    If this answers your question and solved your query please "Click on Yes" or "Click on Like" if you find my answer useful👍

  • Siluq
    Siluq Member Posts: 2 New User

    Hi,

    I noticed that the Predator G1-710 appears to only support M.2 SATA 3 drives, and not NVMe drives like the Samsung 970 EVO Plus. Could you confirm if this is correct?

  • billsey
    billsey ACE Posts: 34,504 Trailblazer

    That is correct, the M.2 slot for SSD is SATA only, no NVMe.

    Click on "Like" if you find my answer useful or click on "Yes" if it answers your question.
  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,414 Trailblazer
    edited December 15

    Yes billsey is totally correct, sorry about that, its my mistake, as the Predator G1 -710 desktop only takes a SATA 3 "B key" M.2 SSD drives into its M.2 slot, so my advice that it takes a PCIe 3x4 drive is totally WRONG 😁sorry as I didn't intend to misinform you all👍

    This is the Predator G1-710 desktops mobo Block Diagram

    If this answers your question and solved your query please "Click on Yes" or "Click on Like" if you find my answer useful👍