Black Hole
May contain traces of nut
I'm staying mum for now.
Musta bought the wrong make then. First thing I did when I got my new one (Dell) was add a second memory stick. Think the NVMe is easily accessible as well. Standard cross-head screws (and unecessary annoying clip things though) to get the back off.I don't relish the idea of opening up my laptop to change the SSD if it fails.
HP, but one of their cheapest models.Musta bought the wrong make then.
Look up YouTube, there's usually somebody documenting how they get in for any particular model (or very similar).I don't relish the idea of opening up my laptop to change the SSD if it fails.
I got a great deal on a HP Victus gaming laptop a couple of years ago that if I remember correctly had a RRP of £1200 and it has no access panels just 8 tiny screws around the edge of the base though my previous £500 HP laptop does have access panels in the base and another £400 HP model with a single access panel. Price and make does not seem to be contributing factor.HP, but one of their cheapest models.
I have. IIRC it requires removing rubber strips on the base to reveal screws. When unscrewed, and here's the bit that'll go wrong, insert something to release the plastic clips and remove the top. Butterfingers here would probably break the clips - as I have done on most of my remote controls. Not forgetting even if I can take it apart I'm likely to cock-up the reassembly!Look up YouTube, there's usually somebody documenting how they get in for any particular model (or very similar).
A laptop I bought twenty years ago ~£1k had such an access panel. Replacing rhe disk was easy-peasy.my previous £500 HP laptop does have access panels in the base