

Product Details
- Size: 16GB
- Color: Multi
- Brand: Super Talent
- Model: FEM16GF13M
- Dimensions: .14" h x
1.26" w x
2.13" l,
.9 pounds
Features
- Super Talent 16GB MLC 1.3 inch IDE ZIF Solid State Drive for Acer Aspire One
Product Description
Super Talent 16GB MLC 1.3 inch IDE ZIF Solid State Drive for Acer Aspire One
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.replacement SSD for acer aspire one 110
By Thief Raccoon
I bought this to upgrade my acer aspire one, the model with 8gb SSD.those 8gb SSD acer aspire one(110s. 150 and 250 come with hard drives.)are known to be extremely slow.back to this item, this SSD is much faster than the stock SSD AAO110 comes with.it is even faster than most hard drives, as a SSD should be.if you're considering replacing the SSD just like me,make sure you consult tnkgrl's video on aspire one.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.Netbook is usable again
By Colin J. Lawrie
SSD is much faster than the original Samsung which had become incredibly slow. Replacement drive fit perfectly and was not difficult to replace (for someone comfortable with taking their notebook completely apart and resembling it). Wish it was a larger unit but for the price it is excellent. I have installed Lubuntu on the drive and I have more than 10 gb of free space that can be augmented by optional sd cards (32 or 64 gb). A good solution to add another couple of years of life to my traveling netbook.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.Difficult install but amazing results
By R. Boatman
Be aware that installing this involves major disassembly of your Aspire, and only works on those models that use a chip-based SSD drive. I followed MOST of [Amazon is deleting the website so do a search for "Installing Acer Aspire One ZG5 Hard Drive"] but had to wing it when I realized that the last few instructions were for a conventional SSD. But it absolutely flies compared to the original Aspire SSD chip, which was a complete dog!In case you don't know this, these Aspires also have a top-secret additional RAM socket hidden under the motherboard (some models have the RAM slot accessible beneath a door under the laptop, but on mine that door leads to nowhere - who on Earth thought of putting a RAM socket where it requires disassembly to even know its there?). Since I had the motherboard apart anyway, I popped in a spare 1GB module I had sitting around, and it worked (make sure it's fully seated or the computer won't boot) - and since it only came with 512MB of RAM, that makes a significant difference as well. Now I have double the disk capacity, triple the RAM capacity, and my Aspire is at least three times faster - fast enough to qualify as a decent little laptop at last. All in all, a success and a bargain!- Keep track of all those screws!- Reconnecting the wireless card is a pain and possibly fatal to the card's tiny connectors. In my opinion, the operation can be performed by removing the one screw and popping it off the motherboard, just leave the connectors alone.- Remember, most of the (many!) cable connectors disconnect by lifting the black plastic part up, and reconnect by sliding the flat cable back in while the plastic part is raised and then snapping the plastic back down like a paper hole punch. The exception is the monitor cable, which you simply force back in. There is no screw under that cable even though there's what appears to be a screw hole - filling that screw hole will prevent the cable from reconnecting.- The Acer is able to boot even before the trackpad and keyboard are reconnected, so power it up midway through reassembly to see if you've missed any connections (i.e. check that it'll at least make it thorough the POST check).- Don't forget the speaker connector, it'll be under the motherboard during reassembly and out of sight, out of mind.- If you want to upgrade your RAM while you're in there, I put in a 1GB 2Rx16 PC2-5300S-555 (I think it's called a SODIMM but I'm not positive). If your machine won't boot afterwards, you might have the wrong RAM or it might not be FULLY seated (I found it's possible for the RAM card to "snap in" even though it wasn't fully seated, removing and seating it more aggressively fixed the issue).


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