Thank you for sharing this video. I have the same model computer and was able to clone my hard drive to the new SSD, change out the drive and add 8GB of memory. Everything went great thanks to your video!!
Awesome video, very helpful! I just did one yesterday for a friend using this tut. 1) In case anyone has the Macrium "Incompatible Disk Selected" error, try a different USB port or try using a powered SATA cable, worked for me. 2) If you have the model number HP All-in-One 24-f0047c (unit base looks like two coathangers,) the screws are under the white rubber covers under the speakers. Loosen the 2 captive screws and remove the base. Pry off the small center plastic rectangular grill. Remove the 3 screws under that grill, and then you will be able to carefully pry off the front speaker grill. Remove 5 more screws which were under there (the manual I found only shows 4 screws but there was 1 more holding it back) and gently lift the touchscreen up like the hood of a car. You'll have to wiggle it a bit to get all the plastic tabs undone without pulling the video cable out. I couldn't get the drive holder to line up with a screw, so I had to hammer flat one of the die-cut indented screw tabs which held the old drive; then the SSD could align flush and I could get a screw in place to hold it. Another video for 24f00 series ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-k0Qlgdgg-xw.html
Outstanding video. Thank you so much. I just upgraded my machine with more memory and SSD and it is day and night. I can't thank you enough. I was considering buying a new machine, but this brought this one back to life and saved a bunch of money in the process.
If it has an available place to add a drive you can do that, then clone to it. You'll need to remove the existing drive after the clone. You can erase it and put it back after you verify the clone to the new drive functions.
Just did mine. Perfect. Didn't have to remove prop leg. About 25 minutes total for clone and 10 minute install. Thank you! May do a ssd on my ole laptop too!
Thank you for sharing the video and info, as well as the people sharing their experiences upgrading their computers. I do have to say, when you were moving the computer around on that surface, flat on is face, it was giving me anxiety.
Excellent tutorial! I am working on updating my AiO since I'm working remote now and wasn't feeling comfortable doing this with an AiO - great resource you've made here!
The heat generated from the SSD didn't boil off the glue from the velcro? I may use this strategy otherwise. I guess there's no way to tell unless you open up your computer again
Thank you so much! This was awesome. Had to upgrade my dad's business PCs, had a hard time figuring this out. Specifically removing the stand. Everything else was cake.
Great Video. Just upgraded my Pavilion All-In-One 23-q113w to 16 MB RAM, Intel Wireless-Ac 9260 Wi-Fi Card, and 1TB SSD with help from this video. Made the upgrade go much smoother after watching this. Thanks for posting it.
Thanks for an excellent instructional video. I was only going to change out my RAM, but I did the programme launch check and my disk maxed out, so I'm in the market for an SSD as well now!
OMG Michael, just came here to say THANK YOU for this awesome video...I had taken over my wife's All-In-One HP, because it had become a dog! Slow-AF! I only used it to check email and could not believe how SLOOOOW this thing was...After watching your video, I hit Amazon, ordered a 1TB ADATA SSD ($95) and SATA to USB 3 cable ($7)...followed your steps to a T, and now this i7 Intel, 8 GB RAM and 1TB ADATA machine screams! It is so fast at boot, that by the time I count to 3, we are on the home screen! WOW! FREAKING AMAZING and quiet! I just re-launched Adobe Lightroom and editing photos on this 2013 machine, in 2021!!! Woot-Woot! Incredible! I may just order SO-DIMM and get this machine to 16 GB of RAM, thoughts?!
Just changed out my hard drive using the same one in this video (I have the HP 23 q120 with 16GB RAM). First cloned old hard drive (had recently wiped it and reloaded everything, so it was problem-free) using Macrium Reflect 7. Hardest part was securing the smaller hard drive to the cage because I didn't have screws with a large enough head. Then I realized that I could simply used the same screw that held the original drive in the cage. Extremely easy process. Programs open up much more quickly now. Thanks so much, Michael, for this tutorial.
@@zyrusfaulmino4521 I went to crucial.com and typed in my computer's information and it told me what RAM to purchase. I think I might've ultimately purchased the RAM from amazon, but I'm not 100% sure.
Thank You, Michael, I have a Pavillion 23 and was ready to S**t Can it. Seen this video and now will upgrade it. Thanks for taking your time and making a video that can be followed without having to keep replaying it to understand Your process in this upgrade. even subscribed and have no idea what your channel is about. If it's in the same field as this video it will be an outstanding channel to follow. Again thank You brother for sharing your knowledge
awesome video. i am trying to decide between upgrading my mother's old computer or buying her a new one and figured it couldn't hurt to try and upgrade it
I have the HP Envy 20, which is great. Only thing I wanted to upgrade about it was the hard drive (and perhaps the RAM), and now I will thanks to this video :D
Wow, I have a HP touchsmart all-in-one. I'm gonna try and do this because my son wants to live stream while he's gaming. He says the computer is too slow. Thanks so much.
@@MichaelTheComputerGuy He'll be playing the game on his gaming laptop, but streaming from computer. I have no clue how that's done🤣. He says he knows how to do it. We just replaced my daughter's laptop screen because she cracked it. We were so proud of ourselves. We watched a youtube video on how to do it. Since that was so easy to do, we r gonna try and do this. Pray for us🤣🤣.
@@erikadavis4022 Ok that makes sense. The extra Ram should help with that. He's probably going to capture the audio and video from the laptop to the all in one through a hdmi to usb capture device.
Hi Micheal. I have the hp envy recline . I will upgrade ram and change to ssd as shown. One question , This model has the 16gb ssd card that works between the ram and hard drive to speed up common file recovery. Should I leave this in place or just remove it. If I remove it will it effect running. Regards from NZ
Two questions do you think a beginner can do this and is it cheaper this way? I believe my all in one computer has the same specs. Debating if I should spend $700 for a new laptop or not 🤔
Quick tip on determining if your hard drive is mechanical or Solid State - click in the search field to the right of the Start button and type "defrag" in the field and click "Open" under "Defragment and Optimize Drives". You won't actually defragment the drives, but it will show you if the drive(s) are solid state.
@@MichaelTheComputerGuy Correct. Don’t run a defrag, just open the Defrag app to see if its an SSD or not. I believe this only works in Windows 8.1 or higher.
Glad I stumbled on your video, 8 have a old all in one sitting around getting dust, can I put a m.2 in instead of a SSD? Either way think can bring out of mothball and give to someone.
They might not have m.2 slots. m.2 didn't really take off until around 2019. If they have hard drives in them right now upgrading at a 2.5" SSD would be worth it.
@@MichaelTheComputerGuy thank you for the quick reply, I wasn't thinking a m.2 would work but best to ask, I will get a SSD and RAM and upgrade that, thank you
i found an older HP AIO (600-1120) in someones trash a while back so i dragged it home - it was a heavy beast! I thought their might be some useful parts in it but when I plugged it in it booted up and worked. I was able to change the admin password so i could login and found it had a i3 processor and 4gb of ram. It probably belonged to a student because it has a 22" screen and a TV tuner built in, everything works fine and now i have to find someone who needs a computer and let them decide if they want to put in a SSD to speep it up.
The proper solution for installing a 2.5" drive to a 3.5" caddy, would be an adapter. They are fairly cheap to get and would have been a better solution than one screw. Other than that, very informative video, thanks!
@@MichaelTheComputerGuy while I can't speak for all adapters, there are adapters that would work. Here's a link to one such adapter. www.amazon.com/dp/B00AYJFXIQ/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_0QPQFb0W78952 I haven't tried a fixed adapter yet, but if for some reason a fixed adapter won't line up, and adjustable one will.
@@darkbarghest83 Yeah, Michael the Computer Guy is right because that adapter is having the SSD sit in the middle of the adapter and in the video, you see the SSD needed to sit against the one side of the holder.
Very well done video that was easy to follow. These All in One PC's are a pain in the rear to work on. I won't buy another used one. Thanks. AAAAA+++++
Thanks for this video!! I have the same exact computer and it is super slow (slower than the one on this vid) i hope to do the same with the same results! Thanks!
Nice tutorial. Thank you for that. I would recommend putting a soft towel down under the screen though... Would hate to have to pay to replace a scratched touch screen that large. Makes my skin crawl every time you rotate that screen against the desktop. I can hear the grit grinding on the screen.
I've since got a desk pad that has made people a lot more comfortable watching the newer videos. The table is torn up from years of use and it is so torn up because it is very soft. It never scratched anything I put on top of it. It took me a while to realize that just because I know it wasn't a problem it would still bother people to see because they would think it was a problem. So once I figured that out that it's not just my understanding that matters that I have to account for other peoples comfort I got the new desk pad.
Thanks, Michael. I plan to replace the failing 1TB HDD (w/ SATA interface, form factor 3.5) in my HP Pavilion all-in-one 23-q114 with a 512 GB SSD. What should be the specification of the SSD (form factor, size, location of the power and data connections, etc.) be to ensure good fit and compatibility with my computer? Because I will not be able to pre-install Windows on the SSD from the failing HDD, do you have a reference or a youtube video on how to install the operating system from a copy on a USB drive after installing the SSD? Thanks
The new, smaller SSD will be swimming in a huge bay of empty space, but you can use elec tape, velcro, or as Michael does in the video, an extra screw, to hold it firmly in place. Careful hot glue gun might even do it. Additionally, I think for 23q, it might help to see this video for how to open the case ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-k0Qlgdgg-xw.html After that you can freshly install Windows from a USB stick: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-5rSSrl_PlNw.html
I wouldn't recommend using a hard drive as your c drive. It would make the computer very much slower. If you need extra storage capacity in a computer like this I would recommend connecting a hard drive externally. With that said if you do need, for some reason, to put a 2.5" hard drive in the computer yes it would stay in place and be okay with this unusual mounting method. On the other hand why not just get a 3.5" hard drive so you can install it into the bracket normally?
The Adata SU-800 series is a good choice. It has Micron memory and DRAM as well. The lower models don't have DRAM. I find it rather silly that HP don't install a 2.5" mechanical HD. The 1TB to 2TB capacities cost about the same as the 3.5" versions nowadays. The computer would be a lot lighter from the get go and would have a smaller drive cage.
Untidy bench and no protection for the screen. Messy use of Reflect without full explanation. Using a screw to hold the SSD by friction could put much pressure on the drive and NAND inside whereas Velcro is a good solution for machines used indoors. OR one can use pieces of insulated wire to make a cradle through the holes in the caddy. This allows accurate placing and can also absorb shock if the machine is dropped. Your mention of possibly using DDR4 RAM was wrong as the slots are specifically DDR3 and DDR4 would not fit. No anti-static precautions were taken when handling RAM. However, your discovery of the bottom screws being retaining levers would have stumped a lot of people and your spudger use was a lesson in accurate care. This tutorial will have helped very many people.
excellent video, I have a hp pavilion all in one 23q015la. By mistake they erased the recovery, I would like to reset the pc to factory version but in hp they have not yet uploaded the recovery discs. Could you guide me where I can get the recovery outside of hp. thanks
Do a Google search for download windows 10 and you'll find a link on Microsoft's website to download windows 10 and install it onto a USB Flash drive. You can use that to reload windows 10. You do not need to buy another licence for windows 10.
Did you ever find a better way to secure the SSD? I have an HP Envy 23 model c110xt that posed a similar dilemma. I had purchased a Crucial SSD and it was just too thin and narrow/small for the original, old-school frame there to secure the HDD. I just snapped the drive in place and replaced the frame with no screw, in the hopes that the internal vibrations will not shake the drive loose. Your thoughts? Should I go back in there and see if there is a different way to secure it? Thanks
Are we not going to talk about how he used 2 different types of ram to upgrade? I've always thought that most likely wouldn't work. Is it different with sodimm ram?
In the video you said you were thinking of adding another 8G memory stick. Do you know if that motherboard will let you have a mismatch between the two DIMM's ? (8+4)
2.4ghz vs 5ghz is more about distance vs speed. 2.4ghz goes farther and is better at going through walls, 5ghz can be faster but doesn't go as far or through walls as well. Whether you're computer can access a 5ghz wifi network depends on the wifi adapter in the computer. You can add a new wifi adapter through a USB port on the computer, desktop or laptop. Search for USB wifi adapter and you'll find them for sale. If you want internal wifi adapter look for pci half mini or ngff adapters or pci e wifi adapters if you have a desktop with a free pci e slot. The pci half mini and ngff adapters can go in desktops and laptops with available pci half mini or ngff slots. As you can see it's complicated. USB wifi adapters are the easiest to install and just about all can do 2.4ghz and 5ghz. Then there's wifi 5 vs wifi 6 and they have alternate names. Yep complicated.
Michael, I have this same model. Could you tell me what I would need to replace hardware-wise if my touchscreen stopped working? I determined that it must be a hardware issue because I've tried everything from drivers to going into device manager to do various procedures and nothing seems to work. It shows as working, but it's not. It does not work in BIOS either. I've read that it could be a motherboard issue, but I don't want to waste the money if it's not that issue for sure. Thank you!
Does this mean you can actually upgade any AiO ? Also graphics card ? Or is it still better to buy a desktop if you're planning to upgrade once in a while ?
I know I'm late but, is there any SSD you would recommend for this? My mom has an old AIO like this, I just upgraded hers to 16GB of RAM and bought an external WiFi antena so she can use the faster internet that she got. She refuses to upgrade fully to a new system, so I'm trying to patch it and give it another breath. Thanks
Any 2.5" solid state drive will work. If you get yourself a Samsung solid state drive and a 2.5" SATA to USB adapter cable you can connect the new drive to the computer and in Windows, install the Samsung magician software which has the migration software built into it. You would clone the current drive to the new solid state drive, shut the computer down and swap the old drive out for the new one.
@@MichaelTheComputerGuy Ahh, I see. BTW, I did a replacement this weekend, and thanks to your helpful video it went 100% perfect the first time! Thanks very much!
Excellent video and very helpful thank you! I have a HP Pavilion 27-XA0011 I’d like to upgrade. I’ve been out of the PC tech scene for awhile and have never felt with SSD drives. Does it matter the type and size drive I purchase on amazon when it comes to SSD? Thanks
According to the specs that model HP has a m. 2 slots that will take an nvme solid state drive. Ideally that's what you would do install. That would allow you to install Windows on the new SSD and then keep the hard drive for extra storage.
Michael Cooper thank you for the quick reply. Would you be able to recommend one for purchase? Nothing smaller than 1TB. An amazon link would be great especially if you get anything from amazon if I purchase. Thanks!
Hey whats up just watching your video, very good man. I have HP 19-3013w All-in-One Desktop PC with a 4gb memory and a 500gb hard drive, i want to upgrade the memory and the hard drive to a SSD what can I go with. Thanks.
Just FYI on the RAM upgrade you suggested the client. For the ALL-IN-ONE HP's. HP recommends no more than 8GB of DDR3 or DDR4 depending on the chipset and mother board. These boards were engineered cheap for a broad range of multi media applications. HP suggests these boards get to HOT adding more than 8GB maximum suggested from their website. Other than my commentary great tips and advice.
@@MichaelTheComputerGuy I have friends that work at HP customer care. I was given a PC all in one as a wedding gift back in 2012 from one of my customer care friends. The MPIP-M5 board can only support 8GB DDR3 as stated on HP's website. The board was originally designed as a PC lap top board for HP/Compaq and was then redesigned as a desktop for the All-In-One. The board has a bottle neck configuration. My board has the intel i7, the board was originally designed for lower power CPU's such as the celeron, and i3. When intel release a slate of i5's and i7's for the MPIP-5 board it was done so to bottle neck the system mother board to prevent over heating. HP's system bios is intentionally designed to handle 4 GB RAM for the 32BIT windows, and 8GB of RAM for 64BIT windows. Right now I'm rebuilding mine from scratch, upgrading the Nvidia GPU GT 230m that came standard on all these HP models, and replacing it with the Nvidia GT 630m that came standard on the compaq laptops. The 8 GB RAM I used was recommended by HP which is the hynix brand for 4 GB, or the kingston that came with 2GB in the 6GB all in one systems.
@@boating2strokenovice726 I've never heard that having too much ram in a computer will make it overheat. There are limitations as to the amount of ram a system can recognize but if it can recognize the amount of ram you put in it it's OK. It will not overheat for that reason.
@@MichaelTheComputerGuy it does though so let me explain in depth. Lets say I want a graphics card with GDDR5 2 GB, versus the standard graphics card with GDDR3 1GB. It increases processing capabilities, which increase Giga Flops, increasing giga flops raises heat, for the demand based on the program. A GT 630m requires roughly 12 watts more power not only for the faster processor, but also for the expanded RAM. More RAM on a graphics card to process faster requires more power. Same instance with Intel processors. The intel i7 processors can handle up to 128GB RAM. Thats a huge amount of RAM not seen on most manufactured systems. So why not just add 32 or 64GB sticks to build to 128 GB? So why do manufacturers state what the maximum RAM allowable is on a board? Easy answer to intentionally bottle neck the system from having cycle fatigue and running hot. In reality doubling the RAM is asking for higher power demands when using programs more specifically gaming, or CAD design programs that require the memory. The 8GB choke put in place by HP was intentional. 1- because there is only a power supply rated specifically for that system. 2- expanding the ram to allow a program that has to utilize more than the 8GB allowable increases the demand for more power. More processing requires more power. For example my HP OMEN laptop came standard with 8GB DDR4 RAM and can be expanded to 32GB DDR4 RAM. So I added a 32GB stick of DDR4 now using programs that require 8GB and higher. Not only have I increased the temperature of the laptop and it feels like I can cook a egg on it. The power supply is far hotter to cook bacon on it. RAM effectively makes it easier for a processor to run more program cycles in shorter durations. The more cycles the processor can crunch a program, the more power requires for those cycles. So unless there is a larger power supply to compensate for more on board RAM since the CPU can cycle more frequently the demand for power causes the over all system to run hotter. Laptops and Gaming Consoles get mother board warping from extended use needing more cycles for memory. The longer the game play and more cycles the hotter the system gets warping the boards. Since the all in one board was originally designed as a lap top board its treated the same way because its difficult to source a power supply to accommodate anything more than the 8GB maximum.
You originally said it was a problem with heat now you're saying it's a problem with limited power. I think you're just wrong about this. They don't state maximum allowable ram they state maximum ram capacity, that can be addressed.
I liked this video so much I went and grab everything I needed to upgrade my own RAM/SSD but i have a question when i went to cloning my computer with the ENCLOSURE it successfully transferred the files onto the SAMSUNG SSD 970 EVO PLUS , but after cloning I notice that the size was different from window C drive to the new drive -WINDOW E they are different in size one said 237GB and the other said 217 GB, can I erase the WHOLE SSD CARD and start over or can I select the two same files to fix each other please help also those files was in RED the rest was blue like above in your video what does it mean
The size difference is from the page file and hibernation file. Those aren't copied in a clone. The clone was likely complete. You just need to take it the original drive and connect the new drive. It should not into Windows.
usually the answer is yes. every harddrive could be upgraded into ssd. on the cpu part, you had to install a cpu-z on your computer to know if your cpu is soldered or not. the soldered one is harder to replace (marked as 'BGA'), and the unsoldered one is easy to replace (marked as 'PGA' if I'm not mistaken).
Hi Michael Cooper. Mine is HP Pavilion 23-b320 All-in-One Desktop PC Do you think it's good to the change its hard disk to ssd? Ram is already upgraded but still slow
So, I hope maybe you'll see this but I have the HP Pavilion 23 all in one and has the solid state drive, had an external drive but it broke while moving. So I want to replace it to get back to the speed I used to have. Any suggestions on what size I should get or rather what speed?
When I cloned a smaller hdd to a much larger 2tb ssd, it produced an exact clone but did not add in any of the extra space. It is only using what was on the hdd and I cannot access the extra space? What do I need to do for that extra space to be part of the C: drive on the ssd?
Right click on the Start button and click Disk Management. That will show you the drives and the partitions on them. Find the one not using all the space right click on it and choose extend or expand. That will take you to a wizard that will allow you to use all of the space.
did you ever tried to add second harddrive by replacing the dvd rom to a 2.5 harddrive caddy on this pc? i tried and failed as the system won't recorgnize the new SSD. even if i upgrade the bios to the lastest version, it still won't work. i added second harddrive on dell and levono all in one pc before using the same method, and they all worked well.
Hi again. Also my hard drive has packed up so would like to change it to an ssd.. I noticed you replaced a 1tb HD for a 256gb one.. Was their a reason for that
Most people don't need more than a 256 gigabyte drive. They just don't have that many files they need to store. So why pay for a larger capacity? Occasionally I'll replace a 1 terabyte hard drive with a 1 terabyte SSD because the person needs that much space. I've recently done a few 1 terabyte hard drive to 2tb solid state drive upgrades because the person needed that extra space.