It’s been an ordeal but I’m (mostly) done with this. I tried using an iflash quad, a zif-cf-microsd adapter, and finally got this zif-msata adapter. The only one that worked is this setup. Worked is a loose term since this is supposed to be a 256gb ssd but its showing as 128gb… Anyways, the pictures below show the steps.

You need the firmware, software, and a 32 bit os to flash it. I’ll add links later if I remember.

Remove the battery

Remove the 6 screws from the back

Not shown, remove the 4 silver screws from the sides, then the 2 from the compact flash card slot.

Separate the back from the case, there is a latch under the rubber flap, between the power jack and rca/usb port. I used a guitar pick to split it.

Remove the drive cover with the 4 small screws.

You should see the drive now, pull up on the black connector shell and pop the drive off. Then separate the zif cable by flipping the latch up and pull in the cable free. Keep the zif cable. I put a layer of kapton tape under the cable on the silver compact flash slot cover.

Put a layer of kapton tape on the mobo to keep the new drive adapter from doing any rubbing.

Attach the zif cable to the new drive adapter and install back in the connector. This positions your drive adapter where it needs to be.

Secure the drive adapter.

Here is the drive I used. Ymmv

Cover the back side of the ssd with kapton tape.

I used a little piece of foam to hold the rest of the stuff steady.

Reinstall the drive cover and assemble the rest of the unit. Boot to recovery mode by sliding the power switch over and holding it there while reconnecting the battery.

You need for select format drive and let it format, then you need to reload the firmware. To do that, you need the creative software. Ill upload that to a google drive or something. It requires a 32 bit os. I used an old netbook to do it.

As for why the capacity is wrong, I’m not sure. I could yank the drive out and find out, or I can leave it alone (option b is what I am doing)

  • SolarQueen@slrpnk.net
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    2 days ago

    Awesome work, and thank you for sharing the process! I like collecting these off-brand MP3 players from years ago, and there’s just not that much information on how to do these upgrades/fixes these days.

    I’ve got a NOMAD Zen Xtra but haven’t done much with it yet. The battery’s borked and I haven’t worked out an easy work flow for getting stuff on it just yet. One day…

    • Know_not_Scotty_does@lemmy.worldOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      1 day ago

      I don’t know about the Nomad but some of the later ZEN player had newer firmwares that borked the battery replacements. The Vision W doesn’t seem to care I think partially because the BMS board is built into the battery itself. I bought some extra storage adapter boards to test so may grab a ZEN touch or vision M to play with but I need to get my library cleaned up first.

      On the transfer side, some of the later models or later firwares basically turn them into mass storage drives. My player shows up in Linux with no drivers fwiw.