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How to replace a hard drive on Vaio G?
I have a Sony Vaio G. When it came out, I bought it with one of the first SSD's on the market - 32GB. It was well worth the money. However, now that larger drives are on the market, I'm thinking of getting a new drive.
However, I have to figure out how to access the hard drive. There's no hatch on the bottom other than for memory. So I suspect that the drive is underneath the keyboard, and I'll have to remove many screws. Does anybody have any tips for me? Thanks in advance! |
With the exact model number, ie, VGN-G118GN, you could search for "replace hard drive <model number>" or "<model number> service manual".
-David |
Special feature of many Vaios to deter user-servicable changes. You have to take the laptop apart, almost completely, to get to the drive. This means undoing about 20 screws, many of which are hidden so not easy to find, removing the keyboard and screen as well as the top cover and bezel. Takes 15 min if you are skilled and know how to do it, hence the rather high labour cost of replacing hard drives in these laptops. Next time buy Lenovo or Dell, etc which allow easy hard drive replacement, in a few seconds. I've done it once for a friend, and will never do it again, it is a hellish job on the Sony.
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Originally Posted by number_6
(Post 15791688)
Special feature of many Vaios to deter user-servicable changes.
Every Sony laptop I've owned has been easily serviceable including both I have now. -David |
Originally Posted by LIH Prem
(Post 15792043)
seriously, it depends on the model. Isn't it ridiculous to pan the entire company because of that?
Every Sony laptop I've owned has been easily serviceable including both I have now. -David To the OP, I had to look for instructions online. Sony offered no documentation how to do this; probably because 50% of people would break something while doing it. |
Again, it depends on the model. I've seen IBM Thinkpads that required keyboard removal to swap out the hard drive. I worked on a standards committee with an IBM guy that showed me how he would swap out his drive so his group could share a single laptop.
I'm about to swap the drive in a Sony FW. It has a panel on the bottom to expose the hard drive, just three screws, then 2 screws for the drive header once its removed. Pictorial instructions (pdf) are on Sony's web site for the FW. But that is not the "G". -David |
Maybe my search-fu is weak, but the only thing I could find was a link to getmanual.com, a pay site. My model is a VGN-G1ABNS. Thanks for all your help!
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Originally Posted by Condition One
(Post 15796726)
Maybe my search-fu is weak, but the only thing I could find was a link to getmanual.com, a pay site. My model is a VGN-G1ABNS. Thanks for all your help!
-David |
Sony doesn't release the service manuals -- unlike HP, Dell, Lenovo, Asus, etc. -- because they want this to be a paid-for service item, it is part of their revenue model. Something to consider when buying a laptop. It is possible to do without a manual, but not for the faint of heart, some of the tabs require pressure enough to break them if you do it wrong. I managed to get it done with no damage, but wouldn't want to try it again.
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Originally Posted by number_6
(Post 15799737)
Sony doesn't release the service manuals
For example ... http://esupport.sony.com/US/perl/mod...?mdl=VGNFW130N -David |
I'm rather fond of my notebook still, so I'm going to hold off on taking it apart and possibly breaking it. I've still got adequate room on the hard drive (thanks to a SDHC flash card). Thanks for your help though!
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Originally Posted by Condition One
(Post 15796726)
Maybe my search-fu is weak, but the only thing I could find was a link to getmanual.com, a pay site. My model is a VGN-G1ABNS. Thanks for all your help!
According to the searches I just did, VGN-G1ABNS is the model number of the BATTERY, not the notebook. |
Did you get this laptop from Japan? Just downloaded the manual (in Japanese) http://dlv.update.sony.net/pub/vaio/...3095915011.pdf
pretty much the only thing you can remove without taking the thing apart is replacing the memory module. On their accessory page, they pretty much say they don't support user replacement of the internal hard disk and only recommend USB/NAS drive. But being an engineer, I will take this thing apart just to figure out what in the world those Sony engineers were thinking :D |
Originally Posted by number_6
(Post 15799737)
Sony doesn't release the service manuals -- unlike HP, Dell, Lenovo, Asus, etc. -- because they want this to be a paid-for service item, it is part of their revenue model. Something to consider when buying a laptop.
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Originally Posted by mobilebucky
(Post 15807835)
Did you get this laptop from Japan? Just downloaded the manual (in Japanese) http://dlv.update.sony.net/pub/vaio/...3095915011.pdf
pretty much the only thing you can remove without taking the thing apart is replacing the memory module. On their accessory page, they pretty much say they don't support user replacement of the internal hard disk and only recommend USB/NAS drive. But being an engineer, I will take this thing apart just to figure out what in the world those Sony engineers were thinking :D I'm pretty sure I can take it apart. Putting it back together is another thing :D And considering I'm traveling weekly at this point, any downtime will hurt. |
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