The Notebook Review forums were hosted by TechTarget, who shut down them down on January 31, 2022. This static read-only archive was pulled by NBR forum users between January 20 and January 31, 2022, in an effort to make sure that the valuable technical information that had been posted on the forums is preserved. For current discussions, many NBR forum users moved over to NotebookTalk.net after the shutdown.
Problems? See this thread at archive.org.

    Blu-Ray drive or burner upgrade?

    Discussion in 'Acer' started by MuteMath, Apr 24, 2012.

  1. MuteMath

    MuteMath Notebook Enthusiast

    Reputations:
    0
    Messages:
    22
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    5
    So I have an Acer Aspire 5720z that I want to dedicate as a media center.

    Does this model allow for a blu-ray drive or burner upgrade?
     
  2. ajbutch123

    ajbutch123 Notebook Consultant

    Reputations:
    3
    Messages:
    298
    Likes Received:
    7
    Trophy Points:
    31
    yeah, just make sure to find out what kind of drive you are dealing with. There are two kinds: mini sata, or the older ide connector. (I can't remember the technical name for it) You are most likely dealing with the older ide interface. Then after you order the drive, all you need to do is unscrew the one screw that is holding in the drive and pop it out. Then swap the faceplate and bracket that the screw goes through to hold the drive in and pop the new one in.
     
  3. ZaZ

    ZaZ Super Model Super Moderator

    Reputations:
    4,982
    Messages:
    34,001
    Likes Received:
    1,415
    Trophy Points:
    581
    According to the specs on Acer's web site, the 5720z comes with the T2310 or T2330 CPUs and X3100 GPU. The X3100 can't help offload video decoding and the CPUs offer in the 5720z probably aren't fast enough to allow for smooth playback. I had a R60 with the T7400 and X1400, which also can't offload video decoding, and the playback was choppy at best. The CPU ran at 100% nearly all the time. It worked better in XP than Vista, but neither worked well. Interestingly, if I ripped and recoded the Blu-ray to play in Media Player Classic, it worked fine. The CPU ran between 30-40% of capacity during playback.
     
  4. MuteMath

    MuteMath Notebook Enthusiast

    Reputations:
    0
    Messages:
    22
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    5
    Yeah I had totally forgotten about the video lag. I have the T2310 dual core cpu. I had recently decoded one my blu rays to 720p and 1080p. My inspiron perfectly handled the 1080p rip but my aspire just couldn't keep up (720p is good btw). I'm not going to even bother upgrading to a BR drive.

    I wanted to pull out the mobo and enclose it in a custom aluminum box, add a 64GB ssd, blu-ray drive, new ram, and Win 7. I'll probably just sell this laptop then. Thanks guys!