Why does a laptop manufacturer recommend ssd less than hdd volume?

bohdan1pam
bohdan1pam Member Posts: 10

Tinkerer

edited October 2023 in 2020 Archives
1.Why does a laptop manufacturer recommend ssd less than hdd volume?

2.What can be the consequences if I put more ssd than a laptop recommends?

It is interesting to hear the opinion of several participants form.

3.
Where to look for the following acer laptop recommendations.




Answers

  • Joe9844
    Joe9844 Member Posts: 578 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    Pricing.

    No way of knowing without looking at what kind of chipset the motherboard has and what kind of bios it is.
  • bohdan1pam
    bohdan1pam Member Posts: 10

    Tinkerer

    or such a nameplate

  • andylb
    andylb ACE Posts: 3,827 Pathfinder
    Exact model number please 

    Please click YES if I answered your question

    I am not an ACER employee
    Thank you and have a blessed day  B)

    ★★ ACE Pathfinder 2019★★

  • bohdan1pam
    bohdan1pam Member Posts: 10

    Tinkerer

    I am interested in different models. And what can I face when I deliver ssd more than the manufacturer recommends. To know all the risks. And what can be the consequences for a laptop.

    And in the future, people know what the problem may be.

  • Joe9844
    Joe9844 Member Posts: 578 Seasoned Specialist WiFi Icon
    I explained it pretty clearly.

    Product segmentation means that this xxx laptop model is priced at $500-$750. They are not going to list a component (even if it works perfectly) that throws the pricing out of window.

    Secondly, what type of SSD and what capacity the laptop supports is governed by its motherboard chipset and bios. You may be able to find out the exact motherboard chipset that particular laptop model has --- thus knowing the precise maximum theoretical capacity it can handle. But you are not going to be able to find out if that Acer laptop's R01-A1 bios is made by AMI or Phoenix or Insyde. So you are not going to figure out Insyde 1.2.3.4 bios can handle a 512GB of SSD and Acer's R01-A1 bios is based on Insyde 1.2.3.4 bios.