Lenovo Legion 5 Upgrade Guide - Boost Performance! - YouTube

Channel: Jarrod'sTech

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I’m going to show you how to upgrade the Lenovo Legion 5 gaming laptop, including battery,
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RAM, storage and WiFi.
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I’ll also run benchmark tests before and after the upgrades so we can get an idea of
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what the changes do in games and applications.
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These are the specs that my Legion 5 laptop had when I bought it.
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Unfortunately the processor and graphics cannot be upgraded as these are soldered to the motherboard,
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the only way to change would be to swap the entire laptop.
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Pretty much everything else can be upgraded though.
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To open it up, simply remove 11 phillips head screws.
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The four screws down the front are shorter than the rest, so keep that in mind when you’re
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putting it back together at the end.
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I’m using pry tools from iFixit to get inside, links to everything used can be found in the
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description, but you could also use a credit card in a pinch.
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Once inside we can see the 60Wh battery down the bottom and 2.5ā€ drive space to the left
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of that.
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The WiFi 6 card and included M.2 SSD are found underneath this piece of metal on the right,
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you need to remove three phillips head screws to take it off, and these are smaller than
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the screws for opening the laptop so you might need a smaller bit.
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There’s a thermal pad by default for cooling the M.2 drive.
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The two memory slots are found underneath this square piece of metal.
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There aren’t any screws holding it in, I just use my pry tools to lift up the corner
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a little, being careful not to damage the motherboard, then lift the rest with my fingers.
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Alright so now that we’ve got access to everything, let’s upgrade.
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With the 60Wh battery that my unit has installed, there’s space towards the left down the
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front for a 2.5ā€ SATA drive, this could be either a hard drive or SSD.
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This black piece of plastic mount holds the required SATA cable and four screws for drive
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mounting, so just remove it.
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The drive tray is held in with four screws, again like the metal plate above the WiFi
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card and SSD these are smaller.
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Once the four screws are removed, you can pull out the drive tray.
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The bottom right corner is stuck under the battery, so you also need to lift up the corner
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of the battery to remove the tray.
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With the tray removed, insert the 2.5ā€ hard drive or SSD and screw it into the tray, using
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the four silver screws that were provided in the black piece of plastic.
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Next you need to connect the included SATA cable to the motherboard.
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It connects here, just below the left fan.
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There’s a little plastic tab which needs to be lifted up in order for the cable to
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be inserted.
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The cable has a little blue tab which you can use to hold it and move it.
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Once the cable is inserted with the pin side face down, push the plastic tab down to lock
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the cable in place.
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Now simply connect the SATA cable to the drive and put the drive tray back in place and screw
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it in, remembering that to get the bottom right corner in place you’ll need to lift
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the battery slightly, like we did when removing it.
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With the 2.5ā€ drive bay in use, it’s not possible to use the second M.2 slot, it’s
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one or the other.
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If you want to use the second M.2 slot, just take out the 2.5ā€ drive tray and it’s
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ready to use.
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Insert the M.2 drive, and screw it in place using one of the smaller screws that was being
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used to hold in the 2.5ā€ drive tray, as you won’t need that anymore.
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I’m using the AData XPG SX8200 Pro SSD which they sent over, and this was giving me 3.5gb/s
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read speed and 3.2gb/s write speed, nice results.
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With the M.2 SSD installed, to get it working in Windows you need to go to computer management,
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disk management, then initialize the disk and create a new volume, as I’m showing
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here.
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You could of course replace the default M.2 SSD with something better, you’ll just either
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have to clone Windows or do a fresh installation.
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With the 2.5ā€ drive tray removed, there’s also now more space to upgrade the battery.
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My Legion 5 came with the smaller 60Wh battery, but you can also either buy it with 80Wh battery,
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or upgrade this yourself later.
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The Lenovo website lists the battery part numbers that are compatible with the laptop,
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I’ll leave a link to this page in the description.
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I found it difficult to buy the 80Wh battery as it was out of stock everywhere, I guess
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a lot of people seem to be doing this upgrade, but I’ll leave a link in the description
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to the one I bought as well as other options.
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Now when I actually bought the battery, the company emailed me first to confirm my laptop
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model, which I think is pretty good customer service as it prevents me buying something
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that won’t work.
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But that said, after I mentioned I had the Lenovo Legion 5, they told me that this battery
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would not be compatible, so I told them that the Lenovo website said this one should be
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fine, but they still didn’t agree.
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In the end I told them to just send it over, because even if it doesn’t work that would
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still be useful to report, but I’m pleased to report that it’s been working perfectly
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fine.
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To get the smaller battery out, you need to first remove that 2.5ā€ drive tray as shown
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earlier, then there are three more small phillips head screws holding the battery in.
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One is hiding under the M.2 SSD that the laptop ships with, so you’ll have to temporarily
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remove the SSD in order to remove the battery.
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I removed the battery cable from the laptop by using my fingernails on both the left and
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right side of the cable at the same time and pulling.
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Putting the new 80Wh battery in is basically the same process in reverse.
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Connect the cable, put the battery in place, then screw the battery in.
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You’ll need to use some of the screws that were holding the 2.5ā€ drive tray in, then
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finally don’t forget to put the M.2 SSD back in afterwards.
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The cables of the new battery were a little longer than the original battery, I just tried
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to push them down as much as possible, but it looks like you can also buy a shorter cable
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option..
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These are the battery life differences with the smaller 60Wh battery and the newer larger
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80Wh battery.
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As we can see there are some excellent improvements possible with the larger battery, which allows
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the Legion 5 to become one of the best results I’ve seen from this test, lasting for more
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than 10 hours in the youtube playback test.
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Next up we’ll upgrade the RAM.
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Mine came with two 8 gig sticks for 16 gig in dual channel at DDR4-3200.
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You always want to have two sticks installed for dual channel, as this will give the best
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performance, one stick will be slower.
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We could go to two 16 gig sticks for 32 gig in dual channel, but instead I’m going with
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two 32 gig sticks from AData for 64 gig in total, so probably overkill for most people.
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When you’re picking memory for this laptop, ideally just make sure you get two DDR4-3200
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sticks the same size.
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Don’t forget to stick the metal plate back over the memory, just look for the clips it
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sits into.
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I’ve just retested a few games with the 64 gig of memory installed to see what sort
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of a performance difference we’re looking at, and in games there’s basically no change,
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which makes sense, 16 gigabytes is still a good sweet spot for gaming that many titles
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are still fine with.
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In Adobe Photoshop tested with the Puget Systems benchmark though, we’re looking at an 8%
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higher score with the 64 gig memory configuration.
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Adobe Premiere was also a little better with more memory, though just a 2% higher score
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this time, so not really a major change, at least in this test.
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Next we’re going to upgrade the WiFi card.
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Now the Legion 5 already comes with WiFi 6 by default, which is pretty good, but WiFi
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6e did just come out, and this is a newer version that uses 6GHz for increased bandwidth,
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but you’re not actually going to get any improvements unless the access point you’re
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connecting to also supports 6e, so this is kind of a pointless upgrade at the moment
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but will be more useful in the future.
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To remove the WiFi card, we need to take off the two antenna cables, but take note of which
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colour goes where, as you need to put them back in the same position with the new card.
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The cables are fairly easy to pull off with your fingers.
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Take out the single phillips head screw, then pull the WiFi card out.
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Insert the new WiFi card, screw it in place and reattach the antenna cables in the same
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spots as before.
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If you’re done here, you can screw the metal plate back on.
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After this the WiFi card was automatically recognized in Windows and it connected to
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my network without issue, you could run a Windows update if in doubt to check for newer
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drivers, or download the latest from Intel directly, but mine just worked, at least I
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think, I don’t have a 6e capable access point so can’t test the 6GHz capabilities.
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I’m not going to cover thermal paste changes here as I’m happy with the stock results,
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but if you want to do this all you need to do is unplug both of the fans from the motherboard,
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then unscrew the heatsink, pull it off and clean off the existing paste.
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Anyway that’s basically it, we’ve now upgraded the Lenovo legion 5 gaming laptop’s
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battery, WiFi, RAM and storage, basically pushing this machine to the limits of what
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it’s capable of.
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The increased memory didn’t really help in games, but for content creator workloads
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it was more useful.
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Extra SSD space on the other hand is always welcome, especially with how big games are
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getting.
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I’d suggest sticking to M.2 slots instead of the 2.5ā€ drive bay, as this also gives
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you the option to upgrade to the larger battery, which as we saw could greatly improve run
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time.
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If you do want bulk space though, you could always install a 2.5ā€ drive SSD or hard
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drive.
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Anyway those are my upgrades for the Lenovo Legion 5 gaming laptop.
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If you want more information on this machine you can check out my full review over here
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for all the details.
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I’ve also tested it in a bunch of different games and compared it with other laptops in
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this one, so I’ll see you over in one of those videos - otherwise if you’re new to
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the channel then don’t forget to subscribe for future laptop videos like this one.