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July 20th, 2023 21:00

Inspiron 5675, help in adding SSD

Hello. 

I have recently received help in the Community Forum in regard to replacing my spinning mechanical HDD with NVMe SSD in M2.2 slot on the board. 

(Dell Inspiron 5675 - OctalCore AMD Ryzen 7 1700, Motherboard Chipset AMD X370, AMD Taishan, AMD K17 IMC. DMI Motherboard Product 07PR60).

As I am completely new when it comes to SDD and I am running into some additional issues, I would appreciate if someone would be so kind as to point me in the right direction. 

I have the SSD, along with cooling components as the thermal pads, copper heat sinks kits. I looked closely at the board where M2.2 is located and there is very little space between as the Battery and RAM Modules are very closely together. 

So, any of the cooling kits I purchased with probably not fit in. The manual states to place a thermal pad to the system board first. I noticed that the surface is not flat and there is a little metal piece like tiny screw, but as I looked closer it is soldered to the board, perhaps a chip to prevent short circuit or a thermal sensor. That prevents me to evenly place the thermal pad between the board and the SSD without leaving a gap, and I am not even sure if it is advisable or safe to cover the small metal object unless I cut the thermal pad around it and put one thin thermal pad on the bottom of the SSD. Then I was planning to put a thermal pad on the top the of the SSD and a copper heat sink. On the web. I noticed that all of them are then wrapped with two plastic clips, but I do not see any place to wrap it around to secure it all together. Is it possible that the thermal pads would hold it all together? 

All sounded all like a simple project, but I am lost due to the space restrictions around the M2.2. I purchased good quality thermal pads, if I somehow manage to attach and close the SSD gently with the screw, could I place thermal pads on the RAM modules or just the chips on them just to be sure that they do not get in contact with the cooling copper heat sink?

The other option I think I have would be to place the SSD into a NVMe to PCIe adapter which I also purchased, since in the PC manual it states that it is supported. I just do not know which PCIe slot I can use. I know that there are two long PCIe identical slots. One is occupied with the X16 Graphic card. Would the second support the NVMe SSD?  Based on the manual it should, since I do not see any other but a very short PCI x1 slot and that would do me no good. 

I am sorry for burdening you with so many issues and questions I am facing with simply adding an SSD, but I would greatly appreciate any advice you might have in order to assist me in resolving my dilemma.

Thank you so very much for your time in reading my message and any advice or suggestions you might have would be greatly appreciated.

Thank you.

Respectfully,

Johan

5 Practitioner

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5.2K Posts

July 20th, 2023 23:00

The PCIe slot seems to be a better choice.  Installing your new SSD there and only use cooling heatsink if the SSD temperature getting too hot (use Crystaldisk Info)

5 Practitioner

 • 

5.2K Posts

July 21st, 2023 20:00

The AMPCOM is better because it uses backet to support the adapter while the SABRENT puts stress on the PCIe slot.  Use the AMPCOM to install your new SSD to the empty PCIe x16 slot. 

If you plan to replace the HDD with this new SSD, you can try Macrium Reflect for cloning.

26 Posts

July 21st, 2023 16:00

Thank you very much for your help and solution. I have those two long PCIe slots. One is occupied by the Graphic Card, the other one is empty.  Would it be the same remaining empty PCIe slot the one where I could install the new SSD? I do not think that the very short PCI slot is the one for SSD.

I also heard that PCIe adapter's sometimes corrupt the SDD. Is it a rare occurrence or a fact? 

I got 2 of them:


AMPCOM M.2 NVME SSD to PCIe 4.0 X4 Adapter Card with Copper Cooling Best Heatsink Upgraded for Desktop PC, PCI-E GEN4 Full Speed 64Gbps
In description, this one claims to have Multi-layer PCBA, Multi-layer protection: Overcurrent protection,Overvoltage protection,Short circuit protection,EMI (Electromagnetic Interference) protection, Heatsink layer for overheat protection . Maximum protection of M.2 NVMe SSD from electrical signal interference.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B098SHJ37J?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details


SABRENT NVMe M.2 SSD to PCIe X16/X8/X4 Card with Aluminum Heat Sink (EC-PCIE)
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B084GDY2PW?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details
This one is the best seller on Amazon, not sure about any protection.

If it makes no difference I do not wish to take more of your time. You have helped me a lot in recent days and I do appreciate it.

26 Posts

July 22nd, 2023 14:00

 I will that. Thank you very much.

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