Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by CyberFonic 2784 days ago
My experience is with an earlier MBP.

I bought my MBP in mid-2009. Early 2010 I replaced the 160GB HD with a 240GB SanDisk SSD. Speed improved markedly and it felt like the battery life became longer as well. In 2017 I had to replace the battery (can't remember the brand, just bought of the internet and it came with a set of required screwdrivers). The MBP is still going well, yup in late 2018. The replacement battery was never as good as the original but it kept me going.

The SSD is still going fine. In the last couple of months I have been using the MBP less, as I do most of my work on a fast mini-tower running Ubuntu. The MBP churns along nicely on the side, running programs which have no suitable, IMHO, substitutes under Linux.

Of course, I run regular backups with TimeMachine using three, in rotation, external USB (spinning rust) drives. Never had to restore due to system losing data, only due to an occasional fat fingered carbon interface glitch.

1 comments

Thank you.

What do you think of SanDisk SSD ? How did you do that ? I mean steps by steps, what tool did you use ?

I think that SanDisk SSD is a good product. It certainly has been reliable over the past 8+ years. I'm sure that these days, there are faster SSDs out there, but you need to confirm that you MBP model has the appropriate SATA speeds to interoperate.

I googled a guide on how to replace disk drives and since it was a long time ago I can't remember the exact steps. But it was roughly as follows:

Put SSD into a USB HD case.

Clone internal disk onto new SSD, the tool allowed the use of larger drive. Again, can't remember the exact program. It was recommended by the guide I followed.

Make a TimeMachine backup - you know, just in case something goes bad.

Shut down MBP

Remove screws on bottom

Locate HD, remove, move some mounting hardware onto SSD (now out of USB case)

Screw in SSD and connect cables - power and SATA.

Put bottom back on, replacing screws. NB: some are longer than others so you need to keep track of which ones go where. Again the reference guide had good hints.

Power up MBP, activate Trim program.

Enjoy.