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How to take a Sony Vaio PCG-5426 Laptop apart to replace the hard diskIntro and Slight RantYou might ask why I had to do this, because Sony run a laptop servicing service. Well the laptop was only 18 months old and the hard disk was fairly dead (consistenly getting random bad sectors every time a few Win 2K applications were run), so we thought it was worth repairing. Sony picked up the laptop, after we paid a wee bit of money, then told us that it would cost £280 to replace the HDD. Given that one can buy a new 20GB HDD for about £80 we thought this was a bit much. Laptop was returned, and we paid a wee bit more money for the Sony analysis. I've taken laptops apart before to replace hard disks, but I have never experiened anything like this before. It took me 2 hours with a few contemplative breaks, and I thought I had broken it several times during the process!! Most laptops have nice little panels that require you to take out a couple of screws and remove the panel to get at the memory, CPU or HDD. Not this Sony. You have to almost completely take the casing apart. I could not find any insutructions/manuals/tips anywhere (including on Sony'website) to help with this. The ProcessYou'll need the following tools:
Remove all of the screws on the underside that hold the keyboard onto the base of the laptop.
Remove the keyboard ![]() The casing is in two halves: upper and lower. To get them apart you need to remove the purple plastic covers that are, kind of, in between the screen hinges and the base: Use a screwdriver to pry them off. With the keyboard removed (yes I know the keyboard is attached to the Vaio in this picture) you can get at the purple plastic bits more easily from slightly inside. ![]() The white cable for the touchpad can also be disconnected (it actually pinged off for me and I thought I had broken the connection, but it seems that there is a little plastic clip that holds it in): ![]() Da daaaa!! you should now be the proud owner of a Vaio that looks like this: ![]() Now you should be able to seperate the upper casing from the lower casing. Now you can unscrew the 4 little screws that hold the HDD caddy in place, and you can take it out, bin it, and order a new one. There are plenty of places that supply laptop HDD's and you'll probably end up with a larger capacity one. Amazingly the whole thing can be put back together without too much fuss, although you might be lacking some little plastic clippy bits that got broken and/or have some extra screws left over.... That's all folks. |
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