Upgrading memory and storage
One of the quiet advantages of business-grade hardware is that it’s designed to be opened and upgraded. Most machines we sell can take more memory or a bigger drive later, which means you can buy what you need now and expand when you need more.
Does upgrading void my warranty?
Section titled “Does upgrading void my warranty?”What is universally true: if you damage something while installing it, that damage isn’t a warranty fault. Static electricity and over-tightened screws are the usual culprits.
If you’d rather not risk it, we’ll do the upgrade for you, often for less than you’d expect, and the work is covered. Ask us for a price.
Before you buy parts
Section titled “Before you buy parts”Memory and drives are not universal. The wrong part won’t fit, won’t work, or will work badly. Before ordering anything, you need to know:
- The exact model of your computer (Settings → System → About, or the label on the base)
- The type of memory it takes, and the maximum it supports
- Whether it has a free slot, or whether upgrading means replacing what’s there
- For drives, the form factor and interface. An M.2 NVMe drive and a 2.5“ SATA drive are not interchangeable
Tell us your model and what you want to achieve and we’ll tell you exactly what part you need, whether you buy it from us or not. This saves people a surprising amount of money in returned parts.
Upgrading memory
Section titled “Upgrading memory”The most cost-effective upgrade there is. Going from 8GB to 16GB transforms how a machine handles having lots of things open, and it’s usually inexpensive.
Both memory sticks should ideally be the same size and speed. Mismatched memory works, but slower.
Upgrading storage
Section titled “Upgrading storage”Two ways to go about it:
Add a second drive, if the machine has a spare bay or slot. Keep Windows where it is, use the new drive for files. Simple, and there’s no risk to your existing setup.
Replace the drive with a larger one. This is more common in laptops, which often only have one slot. It means moving Windows across (cloning) or reinstalling it from scratch. Cloning is straightforward with the right tool but it’s the step where people come unstuck. Worth having us do.
A word of encouragement
Section titled “A word of encouragement”If you’re reasonably careful and prepared to watch a teardown video for your specific model first, adding memory to a desktop or a business laptop is genuinely an easy job, often a single panel and two clips. Ground yourself first, don’t force anything, and keep the screws in order.
If any part of that sentence made you nervous, bring it in instead. There’s no shame in it and it costs less than a broken clip.

