Compatible SSD with Acer Aspire E 15 E5-576G-50GL

UgurEmanetoglu
UgurEmanetoglu Member Posts: 2 New User
edited August 2023 in 2019 Archives
Hello all, i want to upgrade my laptop with an SSD. I contacted with tech. support and after examination they have informed me that i need to get a M.2 2280 SATA SSD, and that i could not install a NVMe SSD. On the other hand, i have read someone's topic on a forum which stated that technical support has informed him that the exact model supports NVMe SSD's. Also, the tech guys who informed me also told that i have to buy 2 notched SSD(which turns out that 2-notches mean the SSD is SATA, according to https://www.atpinc.com/blog/what-is-m.2-M-B-BM-key-socket-3). I will provide the pictures of my SSD slot(i hope it is really the SSD slot).

open

open

Thanks in advance helping me out of this situation before Black Friday ends lol

Best Answers

  • Tom2019
    Tom2019 Member Posts: 227 Practitioner WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓
    @UgurEmanetoglu
    Hi,
    Yes, you can install a M.2 SSD and transfer the contents of HDD, boot with the M.2 SSD, you can check whether you are able to install a M.2 NVMe SSD by installing HWiNFO 64 free program, run it, expand Bus, expand PCI Express Root ports and check their Maximum link width value if you find 2x for any port, then you can install a M.2 NVMe SSD, for more information read this thread:https://community.acer.com/en/discussion/497241/acer-aspire-e5-575-52jf-m-2-nvme-support/p1


    "Hit Accept if its helpful" 
  • MartinJohn00001
    MartinJohn00001 Member Posts: 636 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓
    Hello all, i want to upgrade my laptop with an SSD. I contacted with tech. support and after examination they have informed me that i need to get a M.2 2280 SATA SSD, and that i could not install a NVMe SSD. On the other hand, i have read someone's topic on a forum which stated that technical support has informed him that the exact model supports NVMe SSD's. Also, the tech guys who informed me also told that i have to buy 2 notched SSD(which turns out that 2-notches mean the SSD is SATA, according to https://www.atpinc.com/blog/what-is-m.2-M-B-BM-key-socket-3). I will provide the pictures of my SSD slot(i hope it is really the SSD slot).

    open

    open

    Thanks in advance helping me out of this situation before Black Friday ends lol
      Hi, Good Morning! find the storage information of your unit below.

     Storage 
     Card Reader:
     Supports Secure Digital™ (SD) Card v1.0 / v1.1 / v2.0 / v3.0 UHS-I
     Supports SDHC / SDXC /MSXC
     32GB maximum capacity (for SDHC only) / 2TB maximum capacity (for SDXC & MSXC only)
     Hard Disk Drive:
     500 GB / 1 TB / 2 TB 2.5-inch 5400 RPM
     Solid State Drive:
     128 GB / 256 GB
     512 GB, SATA 6Gb/s (Aspire E5-576, E5-576G, E5-576T only)
          
              As per as the above specs, this unit is compatible for M.2 SSD. As for NVMe compatibility, check the information below.

                               Most older mainstream BIOSes do not support booting from NVMe and most likely, never will. ... But simply having an M.2 slot doesn't guarantee NVMe compatibility. M.2 was designed to support USB 3.0, SATA, and PCIe, and most early M.2 slots supported only SATA.

               I hope that this is helpful to you! If I have answered your question kindly click YES, thank you :3


    Kindly click "YES" to "Did this answer the question" if my answer helped you!      
    Thank you and have a Blessed Day  :3

Answers

  • Tom2019
    Tom2019 Member Posts: 227 Practitioner WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓
    @UgurEmanetoglu
    Hi,
    Yes, you can install a M.2 SSD and transfer the contents of HDD, boot with the M.2 SSD, you can check whether you are able to install a M.2 NVMe SSD by installing HWiNFO 64 free program, run it, expand Bus, expand PCI Express Root ports and check their Maximum link width value if you find 2x for any port, then you can install a M.2 NVMe SSD, for more information read this thread:https://community.acer.com/en/discussion/497241/acer-aspire-e5-575-52jf-m-2-nvme-support/p1


    "Hit Accept if its helpful" 
  • UgurEmanetoglu
    UgurEmanetoglu Member Posts: 2 New User
    Thank you for information. brummyfan2 states "Sorry, your CPU will not support a NVMe SSD, NVMe SSD uses PCIe 3.0x4  you have version 2.0" on the page you have directed. I have a PCI Ecpress Root Port which has Version 3.0 and Max Link Width 4x. However, i'm not sure if the same PCI Express Port could be used by both graphic card and SSD. On the second port i have 2x and 3.0 but his comment made me hesitant to buy it.



  • MartinJohn00001
    MartinJohn00001 Member Posts: 636 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓
    Hello all, i want to upgrade my laptop with an SSD. I contacted with tech. support and after examination they have informed me that i need to get a M.2 2280 SATA SSD, and that i could not install a NVMe SSD. On the other hand, i have read someone's topic on a forum which stated that technical support has informed him that the exact model supports NVMe SSD's. Also, the tech guys who informed me also told that i have to buy 2 notched SSD(which turns out that 2-notches mean the SSD is SATA, according to https://www.atpinc.com/blog/what-is-m.2-M-B-BM-key-socket-3). I will provide the pictures of my SSD slot(i hope it is really the SSD slot).

    open

    open

    Thanks in advance helping me out of this situation before Black Friday ends lol
      Hi, Good Morning! find the storage information of your unit below.

     Storage 
     Card Reader:
     Supports Secure Digital™ (SD) Card v1.0 / v1.1 / v2.0 / v3.0 UHS-I
     Supports SDHC / SDXC /MSXC
     32GB maximum capacity (for SDHC only) / 2TB maximum capacity (for SDXC & MSXC only)
     Hard Disk Drive:
     500 GB / 1 TB / 2 TB 2.5-inch 5400 RPM
     Solid State Drive:
     128 GB / 256 GB
     512 GB, SATA 6Gb/s (Aspire E5-576, E5-576G, E5-576T only)
          
              As per as the above specs, this unit is compatible for M.2 SSD. As for NVMe compatibility, check the information below.

                               Most older mainstream BIOSes do not support booting from NVMe and most likely, never will. ... But simply having an M.2 slot doesn't guarantee NVMe compatibility. M.2 was designed to support USB 3.0, SATA, and PCIe, and most early M.2 slots supported only SATA.

               I hope that this is helpful to you! If I have answered your question kindly click YES, thank you :3


    Kindly click "YES" to "Did this answer the question" if my answer helped you!      
    Thank you and have a Blessed Day  :3