Hard, hard drive removal vs easy hard drive removal in a laptop.


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When buying a new laptop I always look at the service manual to see how much of a pain is it to remove the hard drive. I will refuse to buy a laptop that doesn't allow to remove a simple cover on the back of the laptop to remove the hard drive. There is really no excuse for anything harder than that. Unless of course you have a really thin ultra book. But for a traditional laptop, you shouldn't have to remove the palm rest just to get to the hard drive

In this video I demonstrate a laptop which makes it a pain in the ass to remove a hard drive, and one that makes it extremely easy.

1st Laptop in this video is a Dell inspiron 15R

2nd Laptop is a HP Probook 4540s series

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To be honest; you're comapring a consumer line laptop (Inspiron) to a business line laptop (Probook).

I can remove the HDD in any Dell Latitude series laptop in less than a minute.

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All laptops should be designed with easy access to upgradable parts. It should be a requirement to be able to have easy access to RAM and the HDD without having to rebuild the damn thing.

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To be honest; you're comapring a consumer line laptop (Inspiron) to a business line laptop (Probook).

I can remove the HDD in any Dell Latitude series laptop in less than a minute.

What it shows is that regardless if it's a business laptop, it can be made easily accessible. No reason not to.

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What it shows is that regardless if it's a business laptop, it can be made easily accessible. No reason not to.

Then there would be no reason to buy the $1500 laptop when the $600 laptop has almost the same features!!

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Wow Dell. Talk about a huge step backwards. No wonder I've just switched away from them for the first time in over 10 years of laptop buying.

Just did this yesterday on a 14z. Ridiculous.

I realize it helps them save space, but its time to ditch the optical drive. That takes up fully 30% of the internal space.

Speak for yourself. I'd prefer my Optical Drive staying there on my laptop. For a variety of reasons. I won't be buying a laptop that lacks one in the foreseeable future.

To be honest; you're comapring a consumer line laptop (Inspiron) to a business line laptop (Probook).

I can remove the HDD in any Dell Latitude series laptop in less than a minute.

Not really a problem. My Dell Studio XPS 1647 (just upgraded from this machine to a Lenovo T530) has its HDD just as easily accessible and so has all of my previous Dell laptops. The Lenovo is my first "business" laptop. So, I don't think you're excuse for Dell is legitimate. Warwagon is right, there is no reason to make this as hard as they made it.

I thought Lenovo was annoying by placing one of my RAM slots under the KB. This was just insane to watch.

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Wow Dell. Talk about a huge step backwards. No wonder I've just switched away from them for the first time in over 10 years of laptop buying.

But I did work on someones inspron, that had a service panel just like the one I showed on the video. It was held in by screws instead of those sliders but gave me access to all of the same components with very little effort. So they are doing it on SOME laptops.

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Speak for yourself. I'd prefer my Optical Drive staying there on my laptop. For a variety of reasons. I won't be buying a laptop that lacks one in the foreseeable future.

So buy an external.

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I'm a fan of the newer ProBooks too and hate working on laptops that seem to make it harder on purpose. That service bay approach is tops. (The CPU fan placement and availability with Dell has always been a sore spot)

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Actually had a customer call me today while shopping for a laptop asking what I thought of the inspiron 15R. I told her what I thought about the hard drive removal in that laptop and told her I didn't recommend it.

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