Hard Drive Upgrade Questions.

I have an intel core 2 duo mac with an 80 gb hard drive. I'm considering upgrading to a 250gb hard drive, though I've read that the process is very difficult. How difficult is the process exactly and is it possible for a non-professional. I recently upgraded my macbook pro from 80gb to 250gb, though I believe that I voided the warranty by opening it. Also, would upgrading my mini void the warranty? Is the hard drive in the mini the same as the hard drive in my Macbook Pro?
Thanks!

When you replace the drive with a new, generic, one, you will usually need to reformat the drive. You can do that by booting the system to the original install disk (or a retail copy of MacOS) and then selecting Disk Utility from the Utilities menu when the installer appears. From there, the new drive should be detected, and if it isn't partitioned correctly (Apple scheme for PPC systems and GUID scheme for Intel) and formatted correctly (MacOS Extended (journaled) in most cases, you can do so from there. After that, you can either install MacOS from the installer itself, or if you have a fully functioning and bootable external drive with MacOS correctly installed for that system, you can use a utility such as SuperDuper! or CarbonCopyCloner (both downloadable from www.versiontracker.com) to clone the external to the new drive.
If you simply install MacOS, then when complete you can boot to the new drive, and run the migration assistant to pull your data etc from an external if you wish. Personally I don't like to migrate software or settings, preferring instead to reinstall and configure from scratch to avoid possible issues.

Similar Messages

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    anothamacuser wrote:
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    3. Last question....In the meantime, I'll be upgrading my RAM to 2 GB. Does anyone know why Apple sells their chips for alot! more money than Crucial? Are their quality/warranty/moral issues involved in this difference?
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  • Bootcamp/Hard Drive Upgrade questions

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    MathewMelo,
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  • HP Pavilion dv6000 Hard Drive Upgrade Question

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    ***edit***
    Additional information:
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    Also, I was mistaken, it came with Windows Vista Home Premium, not XP, so I will be reinstalling with Vista HP.
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    You don't give us the exact model of the dv6000 series you have but if it is an AMD processor and the model number is equal to or lower than dv6499 I would be concerned about any extra heat. If you have the Intel version I would be less concerned. The fact of the matter is that the newest SATA-II laptop hard drives draw less power and put out no more heat than before so a current 7200 rpm model would not be any hotter or draw any more power than the 80 gig you have now. However, that model series of laptops has been plagued with unexplained issues with all 7200 rpm drives and all 500 gig drives. I have been telling people here for quite some time that the optimum, low risk upgrade is to a 320 gig 5400 rpm drive.
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    hybrid drive
    not hybrid
    Good luck. There is a small risk of issues with a 7200 rpm drive but I think you will be OK. Keep in mind installing XP takes some special steps, all covered here on this Forum in the XP downgrade guide.

  • GT72 Hard Drive Upgrade Question?

    I am looking at upgrading the hard drive on my MSI GT72 laptop;  which has the availability for me to upgrade.  However, for me to do this I will need to void the warranty correct since I have to remove the label that is on the bottom of the unit that is covering one of the screws, correct?

     You will not void the warranty by removing the screws for upgrades as long as you don't damage anything in the process. The sticker is there mainly to deter inept idiots from possibly doing something stupid and damaging their rig.
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  • Hard Drive upgrade question

    Hi Have a Mac Book Pro 160GB HD. The HD is full and i want to know what my options are?
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    Your options are pretty simple, a) get an external drive to use for storage or b) install a larger HD into your MBP. This should be in addition to your Time Machine external drive. You can easily install a 500 GB drive into your machine.
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    Regards,
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  • How do I reinstall my operating system after hard drive upgrade on MacBook pro?  I have Snow Leopard install disc

    How do I reinstall my operating system (Snow Leopard) after a hard drive upgrade. I did a Time Machine backup before the new hard drive was installed. I put in the Snow Leopard install disc and don't get the icon I'm supposed to double click to install Snow Leopard and then the backup.
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    Ciao.

  • Time Machine confused after iMac hard drive upgrade

    Here's the deal. I had my 24" iMac internal 250-gig hard drive upgraded to a 1-Terabyte drive. Tech guy cloned them with SuperDuper. New drive booted right up and works great. My question is regarding Time Machine, which I have set up to backup to an external drive. I assumed because old drive was cloned to new drive, Time Machine would think it was the same drive and just keep backing it up as it always has. But what happens is Time Machine just keep saying "processing" and nothing ever happens.
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    As V.K. says, that procedure may or may not work.
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  • How can I browse T.M. backups made BEFORE internal hard drive upgrade?

    Hi, all. I have googled and googled with no info on my particular situation. Maybe one of you can help. Here's hoping...
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    Any help is greatly appreciated!

    I think you have to browse them separately, but you should be able to do so by right-clicking (control+click) on the Time Machine icon in the dock or by holding the option key when clicking the icon in the menu bar.
    Choose "Browse other Time Machine Disks" and you should see the old series of backups.
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  • Hard Drive upgrade

    I'm considering a hard drive upgrade but i dont know crap about them. I went over to newegg because i heard it was a good site and found this one......
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    It is compatilbe if it's a 2.5" notebook SATA II 3.0 Gb/s model. Take Csound1's advice. If you buy a WD drive or any other makers' drives do not purchase any "green" drives as they don't work well in Macs.
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  • Hard Drive Upgrade - Incorrect Capacity Shown In Disk Utility After Installation

    I have an older model Macbook Version 2.1 that had an 80GB hard drive installed.  I have just installed a Western Digital Scorpio Black 500GB internal hard drive upgrade and successfully cloned my data over using Carbon Copy Cloner.  The problem I have encountered is that only 98.1GB of capacity is shown in Disk Utility for the new hard drive.  After starting the computer using my bootable copy via an external USB drive, I formatted the newly installed 500GB drive with the appropriate Apple formatting (e.g. GUID and Mac OS Extended Journaled) but it only shows 98.1GB of space available on the new drive.  I was able to successfully clone the information from my bootable back-up of the old drive to the new drive but I just don't have the full 500GB capacity available to me.
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    Hi Andrew,
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  • IPod sync problems after hard-drive upgrade/change

    Hello all,
    Can anyone PLEASE help?
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    When the thing finally just hangs and hangs, I eventually have to 'force quit' iTunes and unplug the iPod without first ejecting. There was one other occasion when I managed to - split-second when the spinning beach ball disappeared - to click "eject" and the iPod succesfully did so.
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    I did notice on one occasion at the beginning of all this that when I managed to unplug my iPod from iTunes, all the album covers were missing from the iPod (although still in iTunes). This was long before I tried deleting the iPod photo cache folder though.
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    First things first the spinning beach ball is usually an indication that Search is going nuts.
    Turn off Search entire Library by clicking on the downward pointing arrow to the right of the Magnisying glass and untick Search entire library.
    Is your music still in iTunes on your new hard drive or is it only on your ipod?
    If it is in your itunes then you should be able to plug in the iPod and uncheck Manually Manage music and sync
    If the music is only on the ipod connect up as above click on the device and Drag all the music from your device to the library. then you can uncheck manually manage music and sync as normal

  • G40 2384-A9U Hard drive upgrade

    I updated the bios to 1.21 which seems to be the latest bios 2006. The hard drive upgrade listed for purchase 2004 was an 80G. I was hopeing that I could put a larger dirve in because the newer bios was 2 years past the hard drive upgrade listing. I tried a 250G but it does not seem to be recognized. Does anyone know what the max hard drive size the latest bios supports?
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    I first entered CMOS (setup) and under security, and set the desktop to disable.  I was able to transfer the data to the 250G from the 40G using Ghost 2003 and selecting the image setting -IB (Image Boot). I was fortunate enough to have a floppy drive on the notebook (G40 2384-A9U). I attached an external USB 40G drive to the notebook, booted with Norton's Ghost 2003 boot disk created with USB support enabled. I went into options and selected Image Boot under the image tab and then copied the  existing 40G drive to the external 40G USB drive. I then replaced the 40G drive in the notebook with the 250G drive, booted with the Norton Ghost disk and selected the image boot again and copied the 40G USB drive to the new 250G drive now in the notebook. I went back into the CMOS (setup) and put the security for the desktop back to normal. The only thing different seem to be the utilities are missing if you hit the IBM access button. I notice that when you disable the security for the desktop in CMOS, you will see an unpartitioned space of almost 2Gigs. This appears to be where some of the 4 sectors that lenovo uses to hold the boot information and probably their utility programs. The norton -IB switch does seem to get the boot sector information but not the utility portion of the unused area. The result is the unused space is reduced to only 2 megs on a 40 Gig drive and shows up as 4 megs on the 250 Gig drive.

  • Spinning beach ball after hard drive upgrade

    Im running a macbook pro i7 2.2ghz  8gb ram  version 10.6.8 SL
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    Did you properly prep the drive first:
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    1.  Boot from your OS X Installer Disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button.  When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.
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    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of the drive in DU's status area.  If it does not say "Verified" then the drive is failing or has failed and will need replacing.  SMART info will not be reported  on external drives. Otherwise, click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID (for Intel Macs) or APM (for PPC Macs) then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
    5. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, check the button for Zero Data and click on OK to return to the Erase window.
    6. Click on the Erase button. The format process can take up to several hours depending upon the drive size.

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