-
×InformationNeed Windows 11 help?Check documents on compatibility, FAQs, upgrade information and available fixes.
Windows 11 Support Center. -
-
×InformationNeed Windows 11 help?Check documents on compatibility, FAQs, upgrade information and available fixes.
Windows 11 Support Center. -
- HP Community
- Desktops
- Desktop Hardware and Upgrade Questions
- HP Elitedesk 800 G2 SFF - SSD as main hard disk

Create an account on the HP Community to personalize your profile and ask a question
02-02-2017 06:20 AM
I'm thinking to purchase HP Elitedesk 800 G2 SFF PC and would like to purchase separate SSD for this PC.
The main reason to configure SSD as main drive and SATA as secondary drive.
Kindly advice if this possible or any SSD model suggestions for this desktop PC.
Thanks.
Solved! Go to Solution.
Accepted Solutions
02-03-2017 02:47 AM
Sorry, my mistake - somehow this 'laptop' word appeared, but I meant desktop...
So, the manual is for a desktop PC and furthermore - it's about the exact model you've listed, so you can easily follow the guide in there and add a SSD of your choice.
Just a small advoce though, since you're going with a dual storage configuration - for a clean OS installation it is highly recommended to connect the SSD only first, install the OS and once it's successfully installed to plug in the HDD and partition and format it in Disk Management though in order to avoid any possible confusion during the process - for instance, sometimes the System Reserved Partition can go on the secondary HDD instead if both drives are connected. If you want, you can follow these steps:
- Connect only the SSD during the installation.
- Plug your installation media - CD or USB - and boot. *Watch your initial boot POST (Power ON Self Test), enter into the BIOS.
- Set boot media (USB or CD) as the default boot disk device. Save and reboot.
- When Windows Setup begins and asks for a disc select the SSD, then make a clean installation.
- When the OS installation is complete, shut down your computer and connect the HDD with the data/power cables and power up.
- Go in Disk Management and check if it appears. If it does then partition and format it, or in case you want to keep the mass storage data simply assign a drive letter to the HDD.
- Go in BIOS and make sure that the boot order is correct so you can be sure that the system will bootup from the SSD.
Cheers! 🙂
Please, Kudo me and choose as Answer if this post helped you! 🙂
02-02-2017 06:57 AM
Hi @mkj1983!
You can add a SSD to the laptop and configure it as a boot drive since you have multiple SATA ports available. Once the SSD is connected and the OS is installed simply go in BIOS and setup the boot priority list so the machine can boot up from the correct drive.
As for the procedure in particular, you can take a look at the manual and page 31 and the next:
http://h20628.www2.hp.com/km-ext/kmcsdirect/emr_na-c04832374-1.pdf
For a specific drive, you can take a look at WD Blue SSD its tiered caching technology utilizing SLC and TLC flash technology so the drive can reach up to 545MB/s and 525MB/s sequential read and write speeds with endurance up to 400 TBW. Here's a link if you decide to check it out:
http://products.wdc.com/support/kb.ashx?id=1cxpUy
Hope this helps and best of luck!
Please, Kudo me and choose as Answer if this post helped you! 🙂
02-03-2017 02:47 AM
Sorry, my mistake - somehow this 'laptop' word appeared, but I meant desktop...
So, the manual is for a desktop PC and furthermore - it's about the exact model you've listed, so you can easily follow the guide in there and add a SSD of your choice.
Just a small advoce though, since you're going with a dual storage configuration - for a clean OS installation it is highly recommended to connect the SSD only first, install the OS and once it's successfully installed to plug in the HDD and partition and format it in Disk Management though in order to avoid any possible confusion during the process - for instance, sometimes the System Reserved Partition can go on the secondary HDD instead if both drives are connected. If you want, you can follow these steps:
- Connect only the SSD during the installation.
- Plug your installation media - CD or USB - and boot. *Watch your initial boot POST (Power ON Self Test), enter into the BIOS.
- Set boot media (USB or CD) as the default boot disk device. Save and reboot.
- When Windows Setup begins and asks for a disc select the SSD, then make a clean installation.
- When the OS installation is complete, shut down your computer and connect the HDD with the data/power cables and power up.
- Go in Disk Management and check if it appears. If it does then partition and format it, or in case you want to keep the mass storage data simply assign a drive letter to the HDD.
- Go in BIOS and make sure that the boot order is correct so you can be sure that the system will bootup from the SSD.
Cheers! 🙂
Please, Kudo me and choose as Answer if this post helped you! 🙂