The Asus VivoBook X202e is a thin, light, and reasonably affordable Windows 8 laptop with a touchscreen display. It’s a little too thick to be called an ultrabook, and Asus sells the notebook with hard drives instead of solid state disks.
But the VivoBook X202e features an Intel Ivy Bridge processor and it should be almost as zippy as a typical Windows 8 ultrabook.
Unfortunately, it looks like it’s also just about as tough to upgrade as a typical ultrabook.
The folks at MiniMachines.net took apart an Asus VivoBook X202e to see what’s under the hood. There are no access panels on the laptop, so you can tell Asus doesn’t really expect you to perform any repairs or upgrades yourself… but you can remove the entire base of the laptop by taking out a few screws.
Once you do that you can remove the 2.5 inch hard drive and replace it with a larger or faster disk. And that’s about it for simple repairs.
The battery can technically be replaced, but it’s a non-standard battery that’s hidden inside the case — I doubt it will be easy to find third party replacement batteries.
Asus solders the RAM to the motherboard, so there’s no way to upgrade the memory. Fortunately the VivoBook X202e comes standard with 4GB of RAM, which should be enough for most tasks. But if you need more memory than that, you’ll probably need a different laptop.
The VivoBook X202e features an 11.6 inch, 1366 x 768 pixel display, an Intel Core i3 Ivy Bridge CPU, Intel HD 4000 graphics, 4GB of RAM, and a 500GB hard disk. You can pick one up from Amazon for $549.
I have a Viviobook x202E and I ordered a replacement keyboard. After looking at the new keyboard, I’m wondering before I tear the laptop apart, will I be able to replace the keyboard or should I have ordered a whole top piece? I can’t find any video’s online of anyone replacing just the keyboard on this model.
it’s astounding that they include the same lousy battery on their 13.3 inch model, the idiots @ asus
what’s the point of having a 11.6 notebook if the battery doesnt even last that long?
No possibility of upgrading the processor?
Yes. 9.5mm is too thick.
Does it accept only 7mm wide SSDs? Thanks!
Yes