I have plenty of posts in draft status, about the work I did for my master thesis and for Zodiac. I hope to complete and publish them in the upcoming months. Today, instead, I resurrect the blog with a quick post about the HDD-to-SSD upgrade I did recently on my Sony Vaio S13.
When I bought it, using the online hardware configuration on the Sony website, the SSD option was very expensive, and it featured an hybrid drive I wasn’t really sure about. So I decided to configure it with a cheap 320Gb HDD, planning to replace it at a later time with an SSD of my choice. Even if this kind of replacement should be straightforward, experience tells that the devil is in the details (remember when the Windows install didn’t have the driver for your brand new SATA drive? When your notebook decided that it couldn’t boot from your everyday use USB key? And what about that hidden recovery partition?), so I postponed the replacement until I knew I had plenty of time to face the possible issues. Well, if you’re in a similar position, forget about it: I followed steps that seemed logical to me to do what I wanted, and all worked flawlessy. So, here’s what I did, hope it helps.
Beware: what I wanted was a clean install, as the Vaio had just arrived from the factory with the SSD. If you don’t want to reinstall your system and applications, you might try copying the partitions from the HDD to the SSD (if the SSD capacity is lower than the HDD, prepare for additional troubles: you have to stretch the HDD partitions before copying them to the SSD). I have done plenty of similar operations with Linux systems, but with Windows I’ve often run into non-sense troubles when moving installations. So, my suggestion is to take the easy path and do what I did: take it as a good clean-up opportunity and reinstall from scratch.
Unfortunately I wasn’t planning to write a post about the upgrade, so I didn’t shoot pictures of the hardware replacement, and I didn’t take note of the exact menu choices involving the recovery procedure. Feel free to ask for detals in the comments if in doubt.
Phase zero: items needed
- some place to backup your data (external HDD, pen-drive, cloud storage)
- recovery media (a bootable pen-drive – at least 32 Gb – or a few blank DVDs)
- a SATA SDD
- a small screwdriwer
Phase one: before hardware replacement
- backup your data
- I used an external HDD drive
- with the notebook turned on, press the “Assist” button to open the Vaio Care utility, and create the recovery media (if you didn’t already when you bought the pc, maybe)
- I used the pen-drive option – a 32 GB Kingston DTSE9
- You need at least a 32 GB drive, and it gets blanked out – you’ve been warned.
- The other option is using DVDs. When I bought the notebook, I tried burning them (I think you needed 5 discs), and there was a burning failure creating the fourth disc. Guess what: there was no option to restart the procedure from the fourth disc, I should have burned again the first three (perfectly fine) discs. Some software developer out there should really feel ashamed. Maybe they have updated the software in the meantime, I don’t know. I don’t wanna know. Anyway: DVDs have other disadvantages… you have to swap them during the recovery (so you can’t go away doing other stuff), can get unreadable, and come on, it’s 2014, everybody hates optical media.
- Ok ok, I can hear you: “but why should I buy a 32 GB pen-drive for something I only need rarely and read-only?” – Well, you haven’t to. After creating the recovery usb-key, I dumped its image in a safe place (a couple of 1 TB HDD, RAID 1, where I keep my important stuff). So, after using it for recovery, I can format and use the pen-drive for other things. In case I will ever need to recovery again, I will restore the image to the usb pen-drive (or another one I will have that day). My RAID1 HDDs are attached to a Linux system, so I just did a dd if=/dev/sde of=/mnt/raid/vaios13recovery.dd bs=1M – but you can use your favourite drive imaging tool.
- I used the pen-drive option – a 32 GB Kingston DTSE9
- Turn off the pc.
Phase two: hardware replacement
- disconnect the AC adapter, turn over the notebook and put it on a flat working surface (yeah, a table!)
- remove the two screws that keep the battery panel closed
- remove the battery
- the HDD is connected to a flat cable that, on the top-left, is secured by two screws. Remove them, and gently unplug the cable (you can’t see the connector, it’s under the cable… in the middle of the screws. Gently pull and the connector will pop-out.
- remove the four screws that keep the HDD in position (one was under the cable you just unplugged)
- gently pull out the HDD
- unplug the cable from the HDD
- remove the two metallic components at the sides of the HDD (more screws!)
- attach the metallic components to the SSD
- plug the cable removed at step 7 to the SSD
- put in the SSD: tie the four screws of the metallic component, plug the cable connector (remember the two screws removed at step 4)
- put back in the battery
- put back the panel and the final two screws
Phase three – after hardware replacement
- plug in the recovery pen-drive and turn on the notebook by pressing the “Assist” button
- select the option to boot from usb
- navigate the menu and select the recovery option
- the process will create the partitions (including the recovery partition) taking all the available space on the SSD, as desired
- at some point, you will be asked to remove the usb key and reboot
- go out for a walk or something, this will take time – finally, you’ll end up with the notebook booting like the first time you turned on it, but on the SSD
Phase four (optional) – removing the recovery partition
If you backup the image of the recovery pen-drive somewhere safe, as I did, you can gain more space on the SSD by removing the recovery partition
- plug back in the recovery pen-drive and turn on the notebook by pressing the “Assist” button
- select the option to boot from usb
- navigate the menu and select the “remove recovery partition” option. This will grant you around 27 more GB.
hi,
im just wondering.. after u replace the ssd.. is the assist button still work, even without the recovery media plugged in?
is ur model also those tat need to use assist button to get into bios?
Sorry, I didn’t see your message… I guess the notification got lost.
Yes, my model uses the assist button to get into the bios, and it works after replacing the SSD.
I’m about to attempt a similar procedure. Instead backing up, I’m going to just copy the files with hdd enclosure. That would work, right?
Not sure about what you mean. Isn’t copying the files on a external HDD backing up?
If you meant that you want to put the SSD into the laptop, and then you expect to copy all the content of the original HDD (in external hdd enclosure) on the installed SSD, that won’t work. You can’t copy a Windows install like that.
If you meant that, after installing Windows on the SSD with the recovery system, you wanna copy your old data (i.e. documents, music etc) from the old HDD put into an external enclosure, yes, you can do that.
I’ve followed your guide carefully, however I had to use an external portable hd to create the recovery media. It was over 100gb.
I’ve physically replaced the drive and have gone back into assist mode, I only get “Operating system not found” even after changing the boot order. Phase 3 step 3 never happens for me. Any help is appreciated.
Thanks
Not every usb mass storage device is bootable, unfortunately.
Try with some cheap pen-drive instead of the portable hard drive.
I recovered the original system back to factory, got a pen drive with the smaller recovery on it. I’m receiving “VAIO Care rescue mode is only available on media created using VAIO care”.
I don’t get it: did you put back in the previous hard drive? Why you had to reset it to factory status?
What do you mean by “the smaller recovery” on the pen drive? Did you create the pen drive with the Vaio Care utility or just copied what you did on the bigger hard drive (if yes, that is the problem: use the utility again).
Unfortunately I don’t remember many details of the procedure, I just did it once a year ago and wrote about it hoping it would be useful to somebody someday.
Maybe the Vaio Care utility changed in the meantime? You might want to try the official tech support, maybe.
What windows did u do it with?7 or 8? do u think there is any difference in steps with these systems?
I used the recovery media creation tool by Sony, and my notebook had Windows 8 preinstalled, so it was Windows 8. Anyway the steps should be similar with 7.
Great description! Initially I tried to migrate the data with the software provided by the SSD manufacturer. I was concerned that only the OS will be cloned but not the other system partitions. Unfortunately I didn’t get that far as the process aborted several times in reading stage already. So finally I decided to do a clean installation. I followed the description and ended up with a factory like installation of my Win7 Pro on the new SSD, together without the other system partitions. After running a series of Windows Updates my Vaio is running like lightning.
Great guide, Dario. My name is Ozeias, I’m from Brasil. I have a Vaio SVS13115FBB
I’m having some trouble trying to do this upgrade. My optical driver is not working anymore and I have a 640 gb (not shure) HDD. So I bought a 120 Gb SSD. My idea is to put the SSD on a caddy in the place of the optical driver and it would run the system and some programs that I use more frequently, while the HDD would have my documents, videos, music…
So, I did a backup and then deleted a lot of non-essential stuff from my HDD. Then I tried to clone the remaining 80 GB of information to the SSD.
I tried to use the AOMEI Partition Assistant. Theoretically, it would copy the HDD to the SSD while re-sizing the partitions to fit in the SSD. But when I tried the SSD on the notebook, it shown a message “Operational System not found”.
What would be a best method to make this clone?
Another question is: I didn’t bought the caddy yet and I don’t know how to open and change it. I did a little search and I saw in two sites that it would be a 9.5 mm caddy in the place of the optical driver, but i’m not so shure. Do you know how to confirm that? And do you know how to open and change it or where could I find this information?
Sorry for so much questions, I’m such a noob. I totally understand if you can’t answare it all.
Peace
Hi Ozeias, sorry for the late answer. You will probably have solved this by now, but I don’t know AOMEI Partition Assistant and I have no idea about how it handles cloning a system/bootable partition. What I do in these cases, if I can, is install the OS on the new drive from scratch, and then copy only the user data from the old one.
Unfortunately I also don’t know about substituting the optical drive with a caddy… Peace to you!