Finally decided I think I am going to get a Steam Deck. Decided to look at upgrading the hard drive, it is a little more compacted than I thought it would be. For those who have swapped, was it easy enough?
- Mandatory reminder to remove the microsd before opening the Deck… 
- It’s mostly unscrewing covers and peeling stickers, if you can get a good savings that way I believe it’s worth it. - MicroSD also is really not bad if you pick a fast, deck tested one. Lots of my non-primary games are stored there and still load acceptably for me - Primary games works fine too for me 
 
- It’s pretty easy. Just remember to remove the microsd card before removing the back panel or it will snap the card in half - In twain - To shreds, you say? 
 
 
- Looks easy : https://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Steam+Deck+SSD+Replacement/148989 - Edit: Is it worth 30-60minutes of your time, the screwdrivers, maybe the spatchula, and reinstalling steamOS onto the drive? - Little pro-tip - I got a Corsair drive and tried putting it in external enclosure to copy to it, that didn’t work. - These small Nvme drives are dram-less, so they borrow some memory from the host system. All of these drives have a fallback mode when they can’t borrow host memory, which is slower. Apparently, the fallback mode is so well programmed that drive can crash during large write sessions. - It worked just fine once I put the new drive inside the Deck, and pulled data from the old drive sitting in the enclosure instead. 
 
- I did mine after watching a YouTube video. I thought it looked easy and when I tried it, it was. 
- Yes. 100%. It was very easy. 
- Yes. You just have to copy your existing system to your new drive. I used dd for this. Afterwards resize your storage partition (the largest one) on the new drive. I used gparted for this for it’s simplicity. - if you don’t care about the content of the drive (just steam games and everything in steam cloud), you can basically just reinstall steamOS with the official image 
 
- https://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Steam+Deck+SSD+Replacement/148989 - I work on computer hardware a lot, so I might not be the best judge, but this seems simple (If a bit tedious) enough for a normal person to accomplish. - Yeah, I was watching the video. The first thing that gave me pause was the, “drain battery to 25% as a charged lithium battery puncture can bee dangerous.” - And then I hate having to use the guitar picks to pry open stuff. - That said, I used to build my own computers. I have installed new SSDs in both of my ps5s. But it is not something I do often. - Honestly, you can half ass that shit. As long as you don’t go hacking away at everything you’ll be fine. - Just remember to remove the SD before opening! 
 
 
- As others have said the microsd card is fine. - But if you plan to use the steamdeck in desktop mode, the internal drive can fill up kind of quickly with random stuff. - I thought it was easy enough to replace, but I used to be a computer tech in my old life. 
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Yes, it’s totally worth it. 
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 - Get good small screwdrivers !!!- That’s very important ! The general consensus is that the ifixit ones are fit for the task. - deleted by creator 
 
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- I paid for the 1 TB model but it should be simple enough to upgrade the SSD. Think of it as a learning experience. 
- Have you installed a Linux operating system before? - The hardware swap is not difficult, but you do have to reinstall the OS on the new drive, so if you’re not already familiar with that process it may be a hurdle. The good news is there shouldn’t be any important data on it, so if you do have a problem you can just wipe it and start over. - I bought the original largest model, and in less than 6 months decided I wanted more than the 512GB. I wish I had saved the $200 and bought the cheapest model. There’s no other appreciable difference. - The top end model has etched glare resistant glass on the panel, both on the old IPS displays and the newer OLED models. - My work sometimes comes with long hours of downtime in the outdoors with the sun shining, the anti glare glass is fantastic for that scenario. I know there are etched glass screen protectors, but I’ve seen one up close and didn’t look as clear as mine. - So, that’s at least one reason to go for it in my opinion. - Yeah I put a screen protector on mine right away. It’s a portable device. - The combination of the etched screen and an etched screen protector definitely hurts the sharpness - I would’ve been better off with the standard glossy screen. - Yeah, I’m not saying one plan is better than the other, just that it’s something to be aware of when making a choice. My steam deck sees a lot of travel and a lot of use, and I’ve never used a screen protector, because you’re really not supposed to with the matte screen. Haven’t noticed a scratch yet, so it works for me. The only protection I use is the tpu rubberized grip case, I think from spigen. That and the case it came in for travel. 
 
- Thank for that. I did not realize this. 
 
- Have you installed a Linux operating system before? - I have. I used to run OpenSUSE years ago, mostly stopped because I was an avid WoW player and I was never able to get it running. - I wondered if it would be a full reinstall, or if the deck had a separate OS drive. - If you have a drive enclosure or a large enough backup drive you can clone the old SSD with - dd.
 
- deleted by creator 
 
- It’s not hard at all, if you’ve done any kind of tech disassembly before you should be good. Just make sure you don’t strip the screws (don’t use a screwdriver that’s too small, make sure it’s all the way in the screws before turning it). - You will have to either clone the drive or install SteamOS fresh on the new SSD from a USB drive. They may have fixed it, but originally the SteamOS installation/recovery USB had a software bug that would crash the wifi driver if you connect to a 5GHz wifi 6 network. So if you have a WiFi 6 network, I would suggest only connecting to the 2.4Ghz version of it until you’ve completed setup and downloaded updates. - If you clone the drive you don’t have to worry about that, but sometimes after cloning you have to realize the cloned partitions to actually take advantage of the larger drive. - If you run into any of those issues and need help, feel free to reply to me here and I’ll do my best to help out. 
- Yes, well worth it. - I see all the important tips in the comments apart from doing it with a discharged battery. - I had no issues when I did mine. - Seeing the discharged battery bit in the ifixit video is what gave me pause. - It’s a precaution. If you were to damage the exposed battery it could cause it to heat up and probably catch fire. - You do no want a lithium battery fire in your house. - If you’re going to do it make sure you have enough time to do it all in one go so you don’t have to leave the back off. - It’s not a long task, I think setting the blank drive up afterwards took longer than the actual drive swap 
 
 
- Absolutely, the best upgrade you can make. 










