cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Upgrading the G75VW

X-ROG
Level 15
http://rog.asus.com/98832012/g-series-laptops/upgrading-the-g75vw/

Upgrading the G75VW is relatively simple: you just need a Philips screw driver. It’s just one screw keeping you out of the main hatch which covers the two 2.5″ hard drive spaces, two SO-DIMM clips and one of the fan filters, as you can see below.

Flip over the notebooks and unscrew the first hatch near the front:



By removing two screws on each, the hard drives can be popped out using the pull tags. Then unscrew the old drive if there is one via its side-screws and add the new drive into the housing, before reversing the process to put it back in.



Unscrew two screws and just give it a tug to the side before lifting it out.



The housing will take SSDs, hybrid drives (like the Seagate Momentus XT) and SSDs in any mix and match configuration you desire. If you want to enable RAID0 or RAID1 for two HDD or SSD, it is available via the BIOS.



Our G75VW has two 750GB Western Digital Black HDDs fitted
From here, the left-hand fan filter is accessible for cleaning, while the right fan filter requires removing another Philips screw and accessing a smaller hatch. Just to be clear: removing these two screws does not void your warranty. Also, as you’d expect, the battery requires just flicking the clip on the base to swap it out. No screw removal required.









However for the sake of transparency to our customers, please be aware of upgrade limitations. While the G75VW has four SO-DIMM slots in total; two of which are situated underneath the keyboard and accessing them requires chassis dismantling that voids your warranty so please plan your needs carefully before you buy.



These two above will be populated first, at the factory, meaning if you buy an G75VW with 8GB DDR3 but later want 12GB or 16GB, dropping in one or two extra 4GB SO-DIMMs is a perfectly warranty-safe upgrade as this requires simply opening the base as described above. However, if you require upgrading all four SO-DIMM slots, this can only be done by unscrewing all visible screws on the base, removing the battery and optical drive, then gently separating the the motherboard tray from the keyboard. Evidently this process is not designed to be user upgradable, but if you feel you are technically adept and accept that you will not be able to return the notebook at a later date, it can be done.
628 Views
107 REPLIES 107

jonzjitsu
Level 7
yes sir,my vertex 4 firmware version is 1.4... they have a 1.4.1.3 - this should be newer right? but update keeps on failing... Never had problems with my corsair force gt on my desktop... >:/

however on my second boot...




all the time on the second boot the ssd will be detected and everything is totally fine.


there's got to be wrong with something ssd or the g75 itself...anyone? Oh and I have swapped the drives and the results are the same.

however on my second boot...




all the time on the second boot the ssd will be detected and everything is totally fine.


there's got to be wrong with something ssd or the g75 itself...anyone? Oh and I have swapped the drives and the results are the same.

jonzjitsu
Level 7
Update: BIOS on first boot








first boot does not recognize the ssd

jonzjitsu
Level 7
Okay.. good thing I have a force gt on my problematic ROG Maximus extreme z(that's why I bought a g75), both ssd's were plugged in however ocz vertex 4 still failed as a primary drive making the force gt to boot up... this is on first boot... on second boot that's when the ocz boot's up... RMA time... will never buy an OCZ again... my apologies corsair you have never failed me before.

P.S. been trying to delete the double post I don't know why it won't.

If upgrading the G75VW with as much memory possible, what memory do you suggest?

Any kind of DDR3 SO-DIMM 1600MHz 204pin? CL9 or CL11?
Max 4GB in each slot, or is 8GB also compatible?
What is preinstalled in the "hidden slots"?

I'm considering the G75VW-T1134V configuration with NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660M and 1x4GB and 1x2GB memory preinstalled because I want to upgrade to two Corsair SSD disks (or one SSD and one HHD) and maximum memory stright away 🙂

Gaming is not the main purpose, but image editing working with huge files.

Just found another configuration with the GeForce GTX 660M graphic card and 8GB memory (2x4GB) for the same price. Guess that one is better for upgrade:) Planning for a Corsair Force Series GT 240GB for OS and programs, and a Western Digital® Mobile Green 2TB for filestorage. Guess that will both opt for power savings and a more quiet system. Original HHD will be used for OS backup.

But still - what memory to fill the two empty slots? Some kind of 2x8GB option? Upgrading OS in the future will make use of it. At time of purchase Win 7 Home Premium is a bottleneck...

Model G75VW ss71-cbil
When i put new memory into the slots under the cover it does one of 2 things. It either won't start or it doesn't recognize the memory. If anything is installed in the slot closet to computer only the power light and a couple others on the front come on and then powers done after about 15 seconds. When only the one nearest the cover has a stick installed I get that "windows didn't start properly message" but will restart if I hit start normally (won't finish if windows tries to fix the problem). It then only shows 8gb not the 12 installed. Memory is "Crucial" 4gb DDR3 Ram 1066 204Pin. Windows 7 Home Premium. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.

You need 1600 MHz RAM. That is what your system uses.
I am disturbed because I cannot break my system...found out there were others trying to cope! We have a support group on here, if your system will not break, please join!
http://rog.asus.com/forum/group.php?groupid=16
We now have 178 people whose systems will not break! Yippee! 🙂
LINUX Users, we have a group!
http://rog.asus.com/forum/group.php?groupid=23

k thanks i'll exchange this and try tomorrow.