There are two easy ways to ground yourself before getting to work pulling apart your PS5. Grounding essentially transfers any static charge from your body into a metal item that is either touching the ground or connected to other metals that are touching the ground themselves, ensuring that you don't transfer that static into your SSD or PS5. You can also use the added storage for media apps. Once done, you can use the drive to store and play additional PS4 and PS5 games, launching them straight from the SSD. Installing a drive in the PS5's internal M.2 SSD expansion slot is actually one of the biggest upgrades you can make to the console. Yes, you could plug in a compatible external drive, which is technically the cheaper option-but then you'd have to remember to take it with you when you lug your PS5 to your friend's place for a good ol' fashioned couch party. With the file sizes of games getting larger to take advantage of the new technologies the PS5 has to offer-including ray tracing, the haptic feedback DualSense controllers, and 4K resolution-that 825 GB of internal space (of which only around 670 GB is usable) will only get you so far.
#Aasync drive full add second drive install
(Seriously, why not 1 TB?!) But did you know it also has an expansion slot you can use to add extra storage? If not, now you do, and it's honestly not that hard to install a second SSD and boost your PS5's capacity by several terabytes.
![aasync drive full add second drive aasync drive full add second drive](https://vibesdwnload848.weebly.com/uploads/1/2/4/8/124850369/466130850.png)
Sure, your Sony PlayStation 5 comes with a built-in 825-gigabyte solid state drive.