Alienware M15 Ssd Slots

Alienware m15 is the first lightweight notebook in the Alienware family. It weighs only 2.16kg and is thinner than the previous Alienware 13. It is also the first narrow-frame notebook in the Alienware family. It is equipped with a full HD IPS display with a 15.6-inch 144Hz refresh rate of 100% sRGB color gamut.

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  • Hello all, Is it possible to change which slot the installed Raid 0 SSDs are in without breaking windows? I've purchased a M15 R3 and would like to add another SSD. The issue I have is that I ordered it with two 256 GB SSDs in Raid 0. I have a spare M.2 2280 M Key NVMe/PCIe 256 GB SSD sitting on m.
  • Step 0: buy the correct ssd and ssd cables. Alienware Aurora R7 ha s restrictions on what ssd to use. You also need a ssd case to fit the 2.5 inch ssd into the slot. Those can be brought in a.

As a gaming laptop, the Alienware m15 keeps the option of dual SSD while keeping the light and thin. The Alienware m15 is powered by Intel’s eighth-generation 7-8750H processor, and the graphics card offers up to NVIDIA GTX 1070Max-Q 8GB GDDR5, It has a 60Wh or 90Wh lithium-ion battery, the 90Wh battery life up to 17 hours!

To access its internal components, we need to remove its bottom panel. Its panel is fixed by 11 screws. It is worth noting that there are two screws on both sides of the notebook ports. This design seems to be uncommon.

After removing the screws, you need to insert a plastic tool or an old credit card under the bottom plate, then carefully slide the tool to separate the bottom plate from the laptop.

After removing the bottom plate, we can see all of its internal components, including the battery, SSD, RAM, speakers, heatsink, fan, and motherboard.

The Alienware m15 comes with an 11.4V, 90Wh Li-ion battery with a part number of XGRXX, which provides over 15 hours of battery life. This notebook comes with two Samsung PM981 256GB M.2 PCIe NVMe SSDs. If you need a larger hard drive to store data and files, you can replace the existing M.2 SSD with two large SSD.

Its speaker size is not very large, which located on both sides of the battery. It has only two memory slots. In my case, it has two Micron 8GB DDR4 2666MHz memory, and you can replace it with two 16GB memory if necessary.

It comes with a Killer 1550 wireless network card with a part number of 028V8D, it supports advanced 802.11ac Wave 2 and can drive twice the throughput of what standard 2×2 11ac adapters can deliver.

Loosen all the screws that fix the heat sink and the fan, disconnect the two fan cables from the motherboard. You can remove the cooling system module. The CPU and the GPU share two heat pipes and a third heat pipe with two fans. The other two images are NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1060 graphics card and Intel i7-8750H processor.

Hi Michael did you ever find a caddy? I’m looking for one too.

The M15 R3 has, surprisingly, a 2230 SSD slot generally reserved for data storage. It’s a welcome addition to Alienware’s M15 R2 successor that offers the opportunity to install a bonus extra disk for dual booting Linux or archiving media files, downloads and other less pressing data.

Finding a 2230 SSD, however, proved to be somewhat difficult. Availability is so sketchy that Surface Laptop owners were pulling the Kioxia SSD out of a CalDigit Tuff Nano in order to upgrade their machines. With the Surface Laptop Go also now presumably sporting a 2230 format SSD the demand for these tiny disk upgrades is only going to get bigger. I had to reach out to Kioxia for a KBG40ZNS1T02. This tiny 30mm SSD offers on-paper read and write speeds of 2,300 MB/s and 1,800 MB/s respectively and the astute reader will notice the “1T” in the drive name does, indeed, correspond to 1024GB of capacity.

The SSD

In a world of 1TB microSD cards I really shouldn’t be shocked by the size of Kioxia’s tiny SSD… or 2230 format SSDs in general- but this thing is TIIINY. It’s really no small wonder that Alienware decided to bung this extra slot into the R3. They had the space to spare and the option of a separate data disk alongside a boot RAID0 configuration is pretty enticing.

Here it is compared to full sized SD and microSD cards. pic.twitter.com/Rb3D443DOs

— Phil Howard (@Gadgetoid) September 4, 2020

On the top side of the SSD is the memory itself, taking up a majority of the space, with a scattering of passives and ICs- presumably to do with power regulation and conditioning- surrounding it.

Sweet lord almighty this thing is tiiiiinnnnnyyyyy! pic.twitter.com/ZI1O61fEil

— Phil Howard (@Gadgetoid) September 4, 2020

The bottom is completely blank, save for silkscreen and the distinct outline of copper traces and pads underneath the PCB resist. There are some interesting features that might be related to heat disspation. Just as well- SSDs have a habit of getting hot, and there’s nowhere much for the heat to go on this tiny, tiny disk.

Has a little ASCII picture of a spider on the back. Hey little guy! pic.twitter.com/UsF9ekt0rP

— Phil Howard (@Gadgetoid) September 4, 2020

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Installing into the Alienware M15 R3

Fuelled by my inability to estimate exactly how long 3cm might be, I quickly ran into a problem installing the Kioxia 2230 into my Alienware laptop. The slot, while labelled 2230 SSD3, is either a 2245 slot or something non-standard.

Apparently so!

Though looking at this photo compared to the size/shape of the actual 2230 SSD does not fill me with confidence.

Nothing a bit of blue-tac can’t fix… pic.twitter.com/bkSJecYREO

— Phil Howard (@Gadgetoid) September 4, 2020

It seems deliberately designed to make it impossible to install a 2230 SSD without an additional bracket- perhaps because it’s necessary for cooling, or maybe another screw post simply couldn’t go where that enticing white dot is placed because there’s something exciting on the other side of the motherboard. I’m not sure.

Suspicion confirmed…. uh @Alienware your m15 r3 2230 slot has a nice white dot exactly where a screw should be…. pic.twitter.com/vC5gWdN4fO

Alienware m15 ssd slot upgradeSsd

— Phil Howard (@Gadgetoid) September 4, 2020

Stubborn as I am, however, I decided to forge ahead and install the SSD anyway. There’s enough friction on the socket for it to stay put without a screw… although I was hesitant to keep it this way. Nothing a bit of 3M tape couldn’t fit- at least to get things up and running.

Had to employ a little artistic license to secure the tiny Kioxia 2230 SSD into the ostensibly 2230 SSD slot on my @Alienware m15 r3… but… IT’S ALIVE. IT’S ALIVE! pic.twitter.com/vkzLnzwFjO

— Phil Howard (@Gadgetoid) September 4, 2020

Quest For The Bracket

What I actually needed was a specific bracket-and-heatsink doodad which would securely screw onto the SSD and, in turn, secure the SSD down to the mainboard.

Ah! From the @Alienware m15 r3 service manual.

Is it *really* a 2230 slot if it requires an additional part that’s not supplied!?

Also… I wonder if a 2242 SSD would fit. Pretty sure I have a SATA one inside my tiny VAIO. Heck of a chore getting it open though. https://t.co/Fpjfy9lMHspic.twitter.com/uWmwRVJhVW

— Phil Howard (@Gadgetoid) September 6, 2020

Unfortunately Dellienware still don’t supply the extra sundry brackets and heat spreaders required to fit every unpopulated SSD in a new machine. This frustrates me enormously, since they’re tricky and unreasonably expensive for a regular customer to identify and purchase. The part I needed is the “CN-08F83M.” At time of writing… Google has nothing on this and Dell’s own website doesn’t serve me any better.

Fortunately in this case Dell had my back and supplied me with a bumper pack of all-the-brackets and heat spreaders to get a full complement of SSDs up and running in the Alienware M15 R3. They even included a bracket to fit a 2230 SSD into a 2280 slot which will prove extremely useful for testing this SSD in a less potentially bottlenecked slot.

Powering up the @Alienware m15 r3 with some much needed heat spreaders for the Kioxia 2230 SSD and the secondary Crucial P5. pic.twitter.com/Ytm93tgrtG

— Phil Howard (@Gadgetoid) September 22, 2020

Testing The SSD

Since I was waiting on a bracket/heat spreader from Dell for much of my early tinkering with the Kioxia SSD I had to get a little creative during benchmarking. Like the other SSDs installed in the Alienware the poor Kioxia had trouble with shedding excess heat. It’s clear that performance laptops need some active cooling involved with their SSDs, or SSDs need to start running cooler. I honestly dread to think what happens inside something like a Surface Laptop Go, but I suspect less heat from the CPU/GPU and a less performance workload might not push it quite so far.

Alienware

To get the best results out of benchmarks I used forced-air cooling- a small battery powered fan that forms the base of a wacky-waving-inflatable-tiny-tubeman.

Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh pic.twitter.com/P8rj22eRyb

— Phil Howard (@Gadgetoid) September 4, 2020

This allowed me to hit Write/Read benchmarks of 709MB/s and 1572MB/s in AJA System test.

And here’s the test with overkill cooling. While the write speed hasn’t improved by all that much, read has gone WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY up because the SSD is no longer roasty toasty during the read phase. pic.twitter.com/B6A53DYqkB

— Phil Howard (@Gadgetoid) September 4, 2020

For an auxiliary disk (or something in a basic laptop) this is pretty good and far, far exceeds the performance you’d see from eMMC. You would, however, be forgiven for thinking it’s not up to snuff for a boot disk in a performance system. And you’d be right. I set up the Alienware m15 R3 with 1TB and 2TB boot/storage drives in the 2280 slots and the 1TB Kioxia SSD as a dual-boot Ubuntu Linux disk. Since my workflows in Linux are less concerned with disk throughput (I’m not loading huge videogames) then this lower performance is not noticable. Additionally I think the failure to hit Kioxia’s posted sequential write/read numbers here might be in no small part due to the 2230 slot being bottlenecked. The Core i9 simply runs out of PCIe lanes since the notebook CPU has only 16 and 8 of those are connected to the discrete GPU. If you’re counting, the remaining 8 are split between three SSDs.

With the SSD and heat spreader installed properly, Ubuntu Linux installed and the system booted into Ubuntu I saw slightly faster read speeds- up to 1.7GB/s from 1.5GB/s. These benchmarks aren’t exactly comparable but the 512MB sample size in the linux disk benchmark gets us closer to Kioxia’s theoretical maximum sequential read speed and performance is very consistent.

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Thermal throttle bgone pic.twitter.com/0KxRbGzwnE

— Phil Howard (@Gadgetoid) September 22, 2020

In Conclusion

It’s evident I have more testing to do with Kioxia’s KBG40ZNS1T02 and I’m hoping the latest wave of ultra-compact laptops using this form-factor of SSD will give me some fodder for this. Additionally, re-testing this drive in a 2280 slot without the potential bandwidth limitations that the Alienware M15 R3’s imposes on its third SSD slot could notch benchmarks closer to Kioxia’s stated maximums.

Alienware

First impressions are good- though- it’s a huge SSD to stick into an auxiliary slot and grants the Alienware M15 R3 a responsive Ubuntu Linux dual boot that doesn’t sacrifice the typical Boot/Games SSD configuration of the primary 2280 slots.

Alienware M15 Ssd Upgrade

The big stickler? Actually obtaining one of these SSDs as an end-user seems to be a little tricky right now. Stay tuned for more!