Upgrading a hard drive on a MAC pro

How can I upgrade the existing hard drive that runs the OS with a new one because it is running out of space or what can I remove or move to another hard drive to free up space.

You can just buy any 3.5" form factor SATA drive and install it in another bay.
The Mac does not use "Special Places" to boot from, so you can boot from the drive you last installed on, or any other specified in System preferences > Startup Drive.
But you should also read this and get an appreciation for why some users would do this, even if you choose not to do it yourself:
User Tip: Creating a lean, fast Boot Drive

Similar Messages

  • I am trying to upgrade my hard drive in my mac book pro using the disk utility in an attempt to clone my old hard drive.  I can only get so far, just before cloning may start and receive an "error 254" and can go no further.  Any idea what this error is?

    I am trying to upgrad the hard drive in my mac book pro using the disk utility in an attempt to clone my old hard drive.  I can only get so far throughj the process where its about to start cloing when I get a message " error 254".  Any idea what that means and how do I get around this issue so I can use my new hard drive?  Thanks for your input.
    Vince

    Connect the HDD to your MBP.  Open Disk Utility>Erase and drag the HDD icon inrt the Name field.  The format should be Mac OS Extended (Journaled).  Click on the Erase button.
    Then try the clone process again.  You may use Disk Utility>Restore or a third party cloning application such as Carbon Copy Cloner or Super Duper.
    Ciao.

  • Adding a solid state hard drive to a Mac Pro 3,1

    I have two hard drives in my Mac Pro 3,1.  I want to add a solid state hard drive and upgrade Yosemite to it.  I will eventually use my existing drive as extra storage.  Does anyone know if this model of Mac Pro can support SSD drive?  Also, can I mix and match normal hard drives with SSD drives?  I know I will also need an adapter since SSD's are 2.5 inch.  The one I am thinking about getting is the Kingston SSDNow V300 Series SV300S37A/240G 2.5" 240GB SATA III Internal Solid State Drive (SSD).  Any feedback that can confirm or deny compatibility would be appreciated. 
    Thanks,

    I have Mac Pro (4.1 2009 model) and I have Samsung SSD 840 EVO 500GB. There is an issue you you want to run Yosemite.  That drive requires that TRIM is enabled otherwise the perforamnce goes down. There is a Trim Enabler  that you can get but but default Yosemite rejects it and disables it so you end up with a driver with TRIM not eanbled. There is a hack that allows you to get it working again but it has some security implications.
    Just be aware of it.
    Tom

  • Best replacement internal Hard Drive for a Mac Pro 3

    I am looking for a replacement Hard Drive for my Mac Pro 3. It currently has an Intel ATA drive. Can I replay it with a SATA drive or a Solid State drive to upgrade it? Thanks.
    Craig

    I need to inform you there are no SATA. hdd in your or any Maqc Pro. Serial ATA only.
    Buy yourself a 250GB Samsung SSD $150 or 500GB $250 are best.

  • What is a recommended internal hard drive for a Mac Pro 1,1 (2006)?

    What is a recommended internal hard drive for a Mac Pro 1,1 (2006) model? I would like to
    add more hard drive space by utilizing the three available slots. However, from my understanding,
    Apple does not produce hard drives for my older computer so I'll need to turn to a third party.

    You are very much over-due for some new larger more efficient drives.
    the most common best approach goes something like this....
    SSD 120GB for system
    WD Black 1-2TB for data (and  put all your data and media files, all your home account sub-folders)
    Backup. I use WD Green but use what you want. I have a small boot volume, TimeMachine, and 3rd that is a clone image of the boot drive volume.
    Very fond of WD 10K VelociRaptor drives. Not much louder now than the WD Black 2TB, $100-200 for 250GB to 1TB.
    You can use any size SATA 3.5" drive, most now are 1TB and up to 4TB.
    You should have always bought Amazon or Newegg or outside of Apple, Apple can often charge 3x what those places charge.
    Probably want to add or replace FBDIMMs you have, these are excellent and price in the last year has fallen.
    2x2GB FBDIMM DDR2 667MHz @ $29
    http://www.amazon.com/BUFFERED-PC2-5300-FB-DIMM-APPLE-Memory/dp/B002ORUUAC/
    WD Black 1TB $93
    http://www.amazon.com/Western-Digital-Caviar-Internal-Desktop/dp/B0036Q7MV0/
    WD Green 3TB $149 - backup
    http://www.amazon.com/Western-Digital-Caviar-Green-Desktop/dp/B004RORMF6/
    WD VR 10K 250GB $103 200MB/sec boot drive :
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B007V5A1BK/
    Those last and last and make a nice boot drive.
    SSD: Samsung 840 128GB
    http://www.amazon.com/Samsung-Series-120GB-internal-MZ-7TD120BW/dp/B009NHAF06/
    Over-due to upgrade and replace the graphic card most likely it sounds like also:
    ATI Radeon 5770
    http://store.apple.com/us/product/MC742ZM/A
    http://www.amazon.com/Apple-ATI-Radeon-5770-MC742ZM/dp/B003Z6QH6M
    http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/726537-REG/Apple_MC742ZM_A_ATI_Radeon_HD_5 770.html
    Your OEM 7300GT isn't helping now and with Lion or the X1900 dust magnet and out of date too. If you have a functional 8800GT still working you are lucky and no need.

  • New hard drive in a Mac Pro - my experience.

    After taking delivery of my MacPro I was keen to add an extra hard drive to use in conjunction with amateur level video editing and photo imaging software.
    At first I bought a 3.0 Gb/s, 320 GB Seagate 7200.10. and it worked Ok but did not seem any faster than the OEM drive (250 GB Western Digital SE) . XBench confirmed that it was in fact 20% slower overall.
    I then consulted this forum and read the many posts re the Seagate firmware problem and other suggestions for suitable hard drives. To be honest it was all great stuff but, for me, a little overwhelming. So today, back went the Seagate in exchange for a 3.0 Gb/s, 250 GB, Maxtor Diamond Max 10 which was all I could afford. I installed the drive, what a dream the MacPro is, partioned it and ran XBench. The Maxtor is 2.5 to 3 times faster than the Seagate and is a quiet drive.
    So if you, like me, want a single, affordable fast and quiet drive, the Maxtor does the job. I am sure other drives are just as good if not better but if you find the research confusing, the Maxtor seems to be a safe choice.
    Also, congratulations for reading this forum before making a purchase - it saves you the 20% restocking fee for returns!

    I want to install another hard drive in my Mac Pro. Just looking for something in the 250GB or smaller range - Western Dig. Maxtor, etc.
    I see plenty of SATA 3Gbs drives - what do I look for in terms of specs. The dimensions are listed in the Mac Pro booklet, however, what type of connector is needed or not needed - seems no cables are needed... how many pins, etc.????
    Appreciate any help.

  • I can not save any data to external hard drive from my mac pro. Is there anyone can help me in this regard?( note, when i first plug my ext. drive to mac i chose option to backup later)

    I can not save any data to external hard drive from my mac pro. Is there anyone can help me in this regard?( note, when i first plug my ext. drive to mac i chose option to backup later)

    The device may be formatted for Windows, as NTFS. The format is readable, but not natively writable on a Mac. To write to the device, you must either reformat it (erasing all the contents) or install third-party software to enable write access to NTFS.

  • I need to buy some new hard drives for my Mac Pro

    I had an extra internal hard drive in my Mac Pro, a Seagate one, that suddenly stopped working and I needed to send it to a data recovery company, so...
    Now I'd like to
    - Install a new internal HD
    - Install a NAS with two/three disks. (Hitachi if possible, as I have read are the ones that last longer, more reliable than WD and by far more than Seagate).
    But to do that I'd like to know how to find out the right type of disks for my computer.
    I'd be very gratefull if anyone would tell me where to look it up.
    Thank you in advance
    In case any of you can help with this, these are the details of my Mac Pro
    thanks again
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    Mac OS X Lion 10.7.5 (11G63b)
    2 x 2.66 GHz Dual-Core Intel Xeon
    Memory 7GB 667 MHz DDR2 FB-DIMM
    Model Name:          Mac Pro
      Model Identifier:          MacPro1,1
      Processor Name:          Dual-Core Intel Xeon
      Processor Speed:          2,66 GHz
      Number of Processors:          2
      Total Number of Cores:          4
      L2 Cache (per Processor):          4 MB
      Memory:          7 GB
      Bus Speed:          1,33 GHz
      Boot ROM Version:          MP11.005D.B00
      SMC Version (system):          1.7f10
      Serial Number (system):          Not Available
      Hardware UUID:          00000000-0000-1000-8000-0017F20F9F40
    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
    The only HD now
    Intel ESB2 AHCI:
      Vendor:          Intel
      Product:          ESB2 AHCI
      Link Speed:          3 Gigabit
      Negotiated Link Speed:          3 Gigabit
      Description:          AHCI Version 1.10 Supported
    ST3250824AS  P:
      Capacity:          250,06 GB (250.059.350.016 bytes)
      Model:          ST3250824AS  P                         
      Revision:          3.BQK  
      Serial Number:                      9ND1P4X7
      Native Command Queuing:          Yes
      Queue Depth:          32
      Removable Media:          No
      Detachable Drive:          No
      BSD Name:          disk0
      Medium Type:          Rotational
      Bay Name:          Bay 1
      Partition Map Type:          GPT (GUID Partition Table)
      S.M.A.R.T. status:          Verified
      Volumes:
    disk0s1:
      Capacity:          209,7 MB (209.715.200 bytes)
      BSD Name:          disk0s1
      Content:          EFI
    HD INTERNO PRINCIPAL:
      Capacity:          249,2 GB (249.199.591.424 bytes)
      Available:          37,91 GB (37.914.918.912 bytes)
      Writable:          Yes
      File System:          Journaled HFS+
      BSD Name:          disk0s2
      Mount Point:          /
      Content:          Apple_HFS
    Recovery HD:
      Capacity:          650 MB (650.002.432 bytes)
      BSD Name:          disk0s3
      Content:          Apple_Boot

    NAS is of course external and depends on how you access it. And then t he ideal for RAID5 for instance woudl be WD RED series, but those do not work inside Mac tower.
    Look up "TLER"  regarding WD drives and RAID.
    Apple does not endorse or anything, not in decades and when there were problems - G5 and early adoption of SATA and changing standards and features, it was users that did the troubleshooting. 
    So unles you are using Apple's PRO RAID card, which I don't think anyone would or should and which is limited to 2TB drives and only instance of a ceiling on supported drives (it is req'd for SAS though), use your own research.

  • I have a Mac pro(1 free bay) and a mac mini I need to back both of them  Is it better to use an external NAS HD or an internal hard drive on my mac pro (mid 2010) What option has the faster GB/s?

    I have a Mac pro(1 free bay) and a mac mini I need to back up both of them (time machine)  Is it better to use an external NAS HD or an internal hard drive on my mac pro (mid 2010)
    What option has the faster GB/s?

    Disk drive using native SATA bus interface will allow the drive to copy and always present and ready.
    But once you have backup any hourly changes should be smaller and as long as the NAS and your switch should allow enough.
    You should always have off line backups and don't rely on just one backup set or just TimeMachine.
    WD RED models are designed for RAID and NAS and 7.2k instead of your more standard slower green 5400 rpm green models while still costing less than WD Blacks.
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B008JJLW4M/
    How to clone your system:
    http://macperformanceguide.com/Mac-HowToClone-backup.html
    http://macperformanceguide.com/Mac-HowToClone.html
    http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/7032/carbon-copy-cloner
    Using Cloning as a Backup Strategy
    http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/7032/carbon-copy-cloner
    http://www.bombich.com/software/updates/ccc-3.5.html
    Clone to internal, TimeMachine to NAS is one way to go at it.

  • How to reinstall a hard drive on a mac pro that was accidentally dragged out of Finder

    How to reinstall a hard drive on a mac pro that was accidentally dragged out of Finder?  I have files on this drive that I don't want to loose or corrupt.

    If you mean you dragged the hard drive shortcut out of the sidebar of a Finder window, you're quite all right - that's just a shortcut and you haven't lost any files. You can get it back by going to Finder preferences (the Finder menu, then Preferences), click Sidebar, and tick the "hard drives" box fully to show all hard drives.
    Post back if you did something different though.
    Matt

  • How can i perform a search on my external hard drive on my mac pro os x 10.9.2 ?

    how can i perform a search on my external hard drive on my mac pro os x 10.9.2 ?

    Mac OS X 10.9.2 is 12 years newer than 9.2.x.    You need to make sure that Spotlight has indexed the external hard drive by adding it and removing it from Apple menu -> System Preferences -> Spotlight -> Privacy.   Check the menu for it:
    to determine if indexing is still going on, as it will say indexing.
    Alternatively, you can use a non-Spotlight tool, such as:
    http://apps.tempel.org/FindAnyFile/
    http://www.devontechnologies.com/products/freeware/ - EasyFind
    http://www.osxbytes.com/ - iFileX (note the MacUpdate link provided on osxbytes page has a Malware advertisement for MacKeeper, do not download).
    http://www.barebones.com/ Textwrangler has a Search file for content, which works on any Text file.

  • Want to add internal hard drive to my Mac Pro

    I want to add an internal hard drive to my Mac Pro bought in 2011
    Running Lion 10.7.5  Processor is 2.8 GHz Quad Core Intel Xeon
    Have a 1TB SATA
    Do I need a 2.5" or 3.5" ? Any other criteria i should know about when looking?
    Advice is appreciated.

    For a Mac Pro you'll probably want to go with a 3.5" drive. I would recommend Hitachi. I put a 2.5" new model Hitachi in my laptop along with an SSD and the Hitachi HD is unbelievably fast for a "spinner." If that's how there 2.5" models are there 3.5" models will only be better.
    Make sure none of the drives you use have a variable rotational speed. Some of the Western Digital Green drives have that and they go to sleep a lot. When they sleep they have to wake up and when they wake up it causes a delay. It won't happen if the drives in constant use but it can be annoying. I believe the Green drives are intended primarily for backup use where speed isn't critical but energy savings and longevity are.
    These are my opinions and observations.

  • I just replaced the hard drive for my Mac Pro, and I am trying to restore what is on my Time Capsule, but it wont connect, and only is giving me the pinwheel of death. What do i do?

    I just replaced the hard drive for my Mac Pro, and I am trying to restore what is on my Time Capsule, but it wont connect, and only is giving me the pinwheel of death. What do i do?

    You will need to boot from some alternate boot device to accomplish this, if you did not initialize the drive before installing it.
    If you have another Mac, you may be able to use FireWire target disk mode.
    If your MacBook has a DVD reader and you have a Mac OS X Installer/Utilities DVD, such as the one that shipped with it, you can boot from that DVD, answer only the "what Language" question, and wait a quarter minute for the MenuBar to be drawn. Then examine the Utilities menu or the Installer menu and Find Disk Utility.

  • How do I overcome error 150:30 with a replacement system hard drive on a Mac Pro?

    I have replaced my system hard disk drive on a Mac Pro and used Mac 'Restore' to restore the complete system from a Time Machine backup. Everything else works correctly, except my current Adobe products (InDesign CS4 and Photoshop CS4) both give a licensing error code 150:30 and each suggest contacting Adobe technical support.
    Can you help?
    Blair Cramond 

    Thanks for your reply. Is it necessary to uninstal the existing CS4
    products before re-installing?
    Ned Murphy <mailto:[email protected]>
    5 May 2014 13:14
    >
          How do I overcome error 150:30 with a replacement system hard
          drive on a Mac Pro?
    created by Ned Murphy <https://forums.adobe.com/people/Ned+Murphy> in
    /Downloading, Installing, Setting Up/ - View the full discussion
    <https://forums.adobe.com/message/6354088#6354088>

  • G5 Hard drives in a Mac pro?

    Can I use G5 Hard drives in a Mac pro?
    One user on this thread says yes
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/15274834#15274834
    but this KB article says, "The hard drives must meet the following specifications: Type: SATA 3 Gbps..."
    http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/MacPro_HardDrive_DIY.pdf
    I'm pretty sure the SATA drives in the G5 are not 3 Gbps
    Any problem with this?  (Other than the older drives being slower)
    Thanks
    DLS

    Backward compatible.
    You can use SATA III/6G drives also, though the bus controller is limited to SATA II.
    Those are all specifications, nothing more.
    And don't use jumpers. If you used jumpers before, because the G5 (most, though the G5 Quad had SATA II support), you might need to remove it. Some G5s only really supported SATA 1.0 and before SATA II or even SATA was really finalized (most drives were barely even legally SATA).
    Caught people off-guard, so un-Apple like to adopt something new so quickly.
    now people are hoping and waiting for more bandwidth and better support for SATA III, to take advantage of SSDs and 6G.

Maybe you are looking for