Internal SATA Hard Drive

Just installed a seagate SATA Hard Drive into my expansion drive.
It was recognized right away, I formatted it and it mounted immediately.
However, the drive is SATA 3.0 and my system is SATA 1.5. There is a jumper setting on the drive to make it SATA 1.5, and I am pretty sure I set it up correctly.
My question is... if I had the jumper wrong and the drive was still in 3.0 mode, would it not work? Or could it possibly fry my system? I think I got everything right, but I am trying to make sure.
Thanks in advance for the information.
Message was edited by: Williams

So... here's the final details.
First, the "top" of the drive is defined as the silver side with the label. The guy I talked to from Seagate was very cool and said he had heard my question many times. So that answers the question about the jumper. Also, the jumper is FACTORY INSTALLED in the 1.5 setting. To change to 3.0 you just remove the jumpers.
Now, as to my question... if the drive was in 3.0 mode would it work in a 1.5 system? The answer is no. It wouldn't damage the system, but the drive would not mount.
However, if the system was 3.0 and the drive was in 1.5 mode, it would work. In this situation, it is backwards-compatible.
There you go, thank you all for your responses.
Message was edited by: Williams

Similar Messages

  • Mid-2009 MacBook Pro sees internal SATA hard drive, but will not boot from or format

    I inherited a Mid-2009 MacBook Pro (15-inch, 2.53 GHz model) with a very strange issue.
    It first presented itself as not being able to boot from the internal SATA hard drive that came with the computer. Nothing I tried could get it to boot, so I assumed the file system was corrupted beyond repair and booted from a CD to try to format the drive. Disk Utility on the CD would not format the drive, giving me strange error messages like "Unable to write to the last block of the device".
    At this point I figured the drive itself must be toast, so I pulled it out and put another known-good SATA hard drive in, booted from CD, and attempted to format. Again, same error messages and an unsuccesful format.
    So I had the bright idea of formatting one of the drives in an external enclosure and then putting it in the MBP to see if OS X would even install. No dice. Get a cryptic error message before installation even begins.
    So I installed OS X on the drive in the external enclosure and put it in the MBP, and it attempts to boot, but never goes anywhere.
    So to sum up, the symptoms I'm seeing:
    MacBook Pro CAN see internal SATA hard drives.
    MacBook Pro WILL NOT boot from any internal SATA hard drive and cannot format or install OS X to any internal SATA hard drive.
    MacBook Pro WILL boot from any CD or external device and seems to work properly otherwise.
    At this point I'm thinking it's one of two things: the hard drive ribbon cable or the SATA controller on the logic board.
    Since the MacBook Pro seems to work completely fine other than this one issue, and will boot properly from both external devices and the CD (also a SATA device), I'm thinking and hoping that it's just the hard drive ribbon cable. From my searches online, I've heard that this batch of MacBook Pros is known to have issues with the hard drive ribbon cable, but it seems in most cases this manifests itself by the Mac not being able to see a drive at all.
    I've done quite a bit of troubleshooting to get to this point, but right now I'm just looking for any feedback at all. Specifically I'd love to know a way I can easily test to see whether it's the logic board or the cable.

    UPDATE: An interesting development!
    I just tried a third known-good SATA hard drive, one which I believe supports SATA I only (but I'm not sure), and unlike the other drives that the Mac sees but cannot properly interact with, the Mac can't even see this one when I put it inside.
    Frustrating as this may be, I believe I'm actually getting closer to a solution since my symptoms now appear to be closely aligned with people having SATA ribbon cable issues.
    Onward!

  • Internal sata hard drives detected as removable?

    why?

    Yes, I installed that driver. It would be nice to know if it's necessary. You can always hide the icon but I use removable flash drives and when I do, I like the icon there. So I can't hide it but maybe you can.

  • Help! Won't start without internal Audio hard drive

    So here's the issue.
    I've been having some problems with my internal Audio hard drive where it will randomly un-mount and I think it might be causing crashes. Anyway, I decided I'd just take it out and use an external drive. When I did that and tried to restart, the computer just loses power. It tries to start and then just shuts off, I never even get anything on my screen.
    If I reinstall the drive, the computer starts up.
    Also, when I take the drive out, it refuses to start from an external drive or a dvd.
    I've tried resetting the PRAM, the NVRAM and the Open Firmware with no results.
    Any help would be greatly appreciated.
    Thanks,
    Stephen

    Yeah, there is. It seems to work fine when the second drive is hooked up and I've made sure it's set up as the boot drive in system preferences. The drive I'm using as the Audio drive is actually the original hard drive that came with the system and the boot drive is a newer SATA drive.
    Also, while both internal drives are hooked up, the computer will start either from a DVD or an external hard drive no problem.

  • Is it posible to use a sata hard drive from pc in bootcamp

    Hello! my old laptop (pc) died a month ago and i have the sata hard drive from it. i was wondering if it is posible to run the hard drive externally or internally in my macbook pro running 10.7.5 lion in boot camp or something? the hard drive is in tact and has windows 7 already installed. i just need to know if it is posible to use or not. i see pages about using bootcamp to get windows 7 internally but nothing like this. and i dont wanna pay to talk to apple support -.-

    If you install the drive internally, you will of course no longer have access to OS X, though the drive should startup. Badly though since the drivers for your Mac's hardware won't be on the drive. I don't recall if Windows 7 will boot from an external drive. I believe Windows itself doesn't allow it and will refuse to startup from an external if you try.
    Do note that this is a lot of work.
    Since I'm pretty certain you cannot boot Win 7 from an external drive, you have to get it on your internal. To move the install you have so you don't have to install Win 7 and all of your installed software from scratch, you need a third party software package.
    1) Purchase Winclone. Follow their instructions for preparing your Win 7 install from a PC to a BootCamp partition. This does involve having the Windows drive in a working PC.
    2) Use Disk Utility to create a FAT32 partition at the size you want Win 7 to occupy. You can do this without reformatting the drive. Make sure you have a complete, restorable backup of your Mac before proceeding in case something goes wrong, or you goof up. Launch Disk Utility and click on the physical drive name of the Mac's drive. Click the Partition tab. Drag the bottom right corner of the Mac's current partition up to create an unused area on the drive. You will only be able to drag it up as far as there is no live data, which will be shown in blue. Make sure not to crowd your OS X partition and starve it for space. Click the + button. A new partition will fill the empty space you made. By default, it will be Mac OS Extended. Change it to MS-DOS, which will be a FAT32 partition. Click Apply. Don't worry that it's not NTFS. When you restore your Win 7 disk image, it will automatically become the same file system as the source.
    3) There is the issue of partition size. If a cloned Windows drive takes up 500 GB on its source drive, that's how much room it will take up on the target drive, no matter how big of a partition you made for it. Say you only want Windows to only take up 100 GB of space. When you restore the clone, it will force the partition size out to 500 GB, because that's the amount of space it took up originally. This is not an issue with Winclone. It's just what Windows does when being cloned. Using something like Symantec's Ghost to restore a Windows disk image on a PC will do the same thing. It will only become smaller if the overall size of the target drive itself is smaller and it can't take up its original amount of space. To force the target partition size down, you have to shrink the Winclone image. I've done this myself, and it does work.
    4) Once you finally get the Windows clone onto your Mac's internal drive, follow only the BootCamp instructions to get the Win 7 drivers for your Mac ready. Boot into Win 7 and install the initial Win 7 drivers for your Mac.
    5) Once that's done, the graphics will be rough at this point. You'll now have an Apple Software Update menu item in Windows. Run that to download and install any other BootCamp drivers it lists. When you restart after that, the desktop should then be correct.

  • Will this laptop support a sata hard drive?

    Running an HP Pavilion Model dv4-2145dx.
    Will this laptop support an internal 1T SATA Hard Drive?

    Yes as long as it is a 9.5 mm thick 2.5 inch wide drive. Some 1 TB 2.5" SATA drives are 12 mm and are designed primarily for Blade Servers, not laptops. This one will work:
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822152291
    The other problem is that 1 TB laptop drives are maximum 5400 rpm. I personally will not use anything but a 7200 rpm drive since they perform much better. I believe the biggest 7200 rpm drive you can get is a 750 gb.

  • Sometimes cannot start PC: problem with Hitachi SATA Hard drive and K7N2G-ILSR

    I have major problem with my 160Gb SATA Hitachi hard drive and my MSI K7N2G-ILSR motherboard.  Sometimes the PC can be started, sometimes it cannot.
    After I installed a clean build of Windows XP Pro SP1 onto my new hard drive (as the only hard drive in my PC) and install all the necessary drivers, the system runs smoothly.  However, after about 2 to 3 weeks, sometimes when I start the PC, it cannot detect the hard drive and hence it claimes that it cannot find any VMI Pool Data (i.e. no OS detected).  What makes it really horrible is that, it is like the lottery everytime when I start the PC.  Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.  The highest record was 8 consecutive failures (by resetting or by turning the power off and on again) before I can start the machine properly.  Also, the system sometimes just crashes in the middle of operating.
    I have already sent the hard drive back to Hitachi.  Got the same model of hard drive back as replacement, but the replacement has the same problem, except with the replacement drive the PC can be started eventually after many tries, while with the previous drive it is possible that the PC cannot be started until after a few days later.
    Also, it seems that my drive can detect either SATA hard drive or PATA hard drive, but not both.  (If I leave my old PATA drive connect in the primary IDE channel, Windows cannot detect the new SATA drive.)
    Is my motherboard faulty?  Can it only use PATA drive?
    My PC's spec is as follows:
    AMD Athlon XP 2500+
    512Mb PC3200 SDRAM (set to run at 166MHz)
    Hitachi 160Gb SATA Hard drive on 1st SATA channel (Model #HDS722516VLSA80)
    Sony DVD+-RW drive and Panasonic DVD-ROM drive on secondary IDE channel
    Use onboard video (GeForce MX)
    US Robotech V92 internal PCI modem
    SoundBlaster Audigy 2 Player soundcard
    Onboard audio disabled
    300W PSU
    OS is Windows XP Pro SP1 (with all latest security patches up to date)

    Quote
    Originally posted by Raven_
    Quote
    Originally posted by boucher91
    Along the same lines the sata drives use more power than the pata drives...
    sata usually faster spin rate, pata is slower spin rate...
    that is not entirly correct.
    many harddrives just come with different ways to connect them.
    the only sata drives i now that spins faster is western digital raptors 10k rpm.
    all other is running at 7200rpm.
    older drives run at 5400rpm
    Yes to get the full benefit of RAID, the Raptors are the way to go.Anything else, no significant difference.

  • Need help in installing a SATA hard drive with 865pe NEO2

    Hello there
    I need a help in installing a Sata hard drive ,it is WD 250 GB , my motherboard is 865PE Noe2 , the bios is the latest one
    already I got another old hard drive ,not a Sata ,a regular IDE one installed as a master hard drive
    I want to install the sata hd as a slave for the IDE hd for now to transfer the files and documents
    I already physically installed the Sata hard drive yet the problem is that it was listed in the bios , I followed some of the steps here in the forum mentioned but all what I got is I found it listed as the fourth IDE master , not as the primary IDE slave
    in Windows Xp Sp2 it is not listed of course in the windows explorer , but it is there in the device manager
    look I am very confused and I tried most of the combinations in the ide configuration in BIOS 
    what should I do coz I am feeling so bad and stupid  ,you can consider me a n00b in this hard drive thing

    1st the sata drive cannot be listed as a slave drive to the ide master [key word=ide-can be configured as master OR slave, master IF only 1 hd, master and slave IF 2 hds], on the sata controler you can have master and slave, the ide cable has two connectors for the hds, sata has only 1 hd connector.
    are you wanting to install the sata as primary master and move the operating sys to that drive, if so you will need an IMAGING software to move an operating system OR you could do a fresh operating system install to the sata drive then install your programs.

  • Seagate 300gig sata hard drive not recognized

    I'm trying to install a seagate 300gb sata hard drive in my dual 2.0 g5.
    I can plug in the two cables and the drive fits in fine, it even spins, however the computer does not recognize that the drive is there.
    I've checked the sata in the system profile and tried disk utility but it is simply not there. Could this be a wiring problem or a bad drive? How do I check this?

    My guess is that it is a Seagate 7200.9 with SSC on. If that is the case you will need a PC and this tool:
    http://www.seagate.com/support/kb/disc/faq/ssc.html

  • HT5634 How to put windows 8 on MacBook Pro via sata hard drive USB off of other computer

    Hi I have recently purchased a MacBook Pro 15 retina. My old laptop was windows 8 but the motherboard crashed and I have the sata hard drive that has all of my data info including OS would I be able to use the OS on Boot camp without purchasing a new license? Also how would I do that? I have put the hard drive into a portable USB device so I can access it via USB 3.0.

    Others will give a better answer, but I suspect that Windows validation will consider this a "significant hardware change", meaning that it will stop working and/or you won't be able to update. Even so, it costs nothing to give it a try and see what happens.

  • How do i install sata hard drive?

    ok, i am using right now my sony dvdrw on ide1 as master and ata hard drive on ide2 as master, booting to the hard drive. i am going to install an sata hard drive and use that as the boot drive, the normal ata as a storage drive only. how will i install the sata drive? do i install it to sata 1 and then durring the install of windows xp tell it to hit f6 for third party scsi drivers and then use the intel sata floppy driver disk that came with my board? it's the MSI-6728 board. or is there anything special i need to do in the bios or what?
    oh yeah. what connection for power should i use? my powersupply has sata and normal, so should i use the sata power connector? and then what's this about legacy or something in the bios, or am i wrong?

    Well first of all, you dont install the Intel S-ATA Driver Disc unless you are going to create a RAID Array....Go into the BIOS and on the "On-Chip IDE Configuration" Page Set the Options like this.........
    On-Chip ATA Operate Mode : Legacy
    ATA Configuration : P-ATA+S-ATA
    Keep S-ATA Enabled : (Greyed Out Yes)
    Keep P-ATA Enabled : (Greyed Out Yes)
    P-ATA Channel Selection : Both
    Combined Mode Operation (At first you have to set this to P-ATA Channel 1, then switch after you Move Windows to S-ATA)
    Configure S-ATA As RAID : No
    Then you are Going to have to Install the OS on The SATA and Just Move the Files that you want to save from the P-ATA HDD and then Remove the P-ATA Drive from the "Boot Device" List in the BIOS....
    You really should List Your Full System Specs. When you POST...Create a "Signature" with your Forum User Control Panel...........Sean REILLY875

  • MacBook hard drive and SATA hard drive

    Can I use the Hitachi’s Travelstar 5K160 HTS541616J9SA00 2.5-inch SATA hard drive to, instead of putting their drive in the enclosure (it doesn’t come pre-installed), put my MAC Book (black model) hard drive in? I want to transfer the data from this hard drive into another MAC Book. My original computer had a problem with the board but I have my hard drive with data intact. I want to buy this SATA but am not sure if this would work, if I can put in the MacBook hard drive as if it was the SATA one... Help, anyone? Thanks!
    MacBook   Mac OS X (10.4.10)  

    Hi there,
    A number of people on NewEgg's product page for that drive say it's great for a MacBook, so I'd assume it's ok.
    You can put your old MacBook hard drive into any external USB2.0 enclosure and retrieve the data.
    Regards!

  • I want to pgrade to an SSD drive in my Mid 2007 MacBook. What SATA hard drive can I install 2 or 3??

    I want to pgrade to an SSD drive in my Mid 2007 MacBook. What SATA hard drive can I install 2 or 3?? That seems to be just about all I can find out there, so far. Are those drives compatable with this macine?  thx

    SATA II

  • Want to swap internal 120GB hard drive with 500GB but retain Aperture Lib

    I am still on Aperture 2 but want to upgrade to Aperture 3. Current Aperture lib has grown to over 40GB. My laptop is starting to get generally slower and I feel that I have a lot of HDD fragmentation that I have not resolved yet. My internal HDD is 120GB with only 19GB now available. I do a monthly backup to an external 500GB drive using Time Machine. No other backups performed nor do I do any Aperture backup including vaulting. My laptop is roughly 3 years old.
    I have not used any kind of defrag software. I have been reading about iDefrag which gets a lot of praise. But my understanding is that to use it, you need to have a lot of disk free space to copy files to temporarily. Below is what I plan to do and I am asking for opinions as to whether it is practical.
    1.) Purchase another 500GB portable external drive.
    2.) Divide new drive in 2 partitions; bootable 300GB and 165GB (remainder is used in formatting).
    3.) Copy my entire internal 120GB hard drive to bootable 300GB partition as a full system backup.
    4.) Start Aperture.
    5.) Vault my entire Aperture 2 library to non-bootable 165GB partition.
    6.) Stop Aperture.
    7.) Have Apple technician swap out internal 120GB drive and replace it with a new 500GB drive.
    (Data will not be copied from old drive to new drive by Apple tech.).
    8.) Boot the reconfigured laptop from the 300GB external drive.
    Q1.) Is it possible to boot from an external drive with no data on the internal drive?
    9.) If yes, copy the 300GB drive to the new internal 500GB drive. (Maybe format 500GB first?)
    Q2.) Will the copy put in place all previous software e.g. Aperture, etc. on new drive.
    Q3.) Will I be able to start Aperture and retrieve images without accessing 165GB partition?
    Q4.) If I can not access my Aperture library images after the copy, can I restore the library
    from the vault operation in step 5?
    10.) Upgrade to Aperture 3.

    Hi metoymi;
    Personally I don't like your plan. Even with two partition on a single drive all of your eggs are in a single basket. The most like disk problem is disk failure which will wipe out both partition on the single drive.
    I know it is more to carry but I would suggest that you at least consider putting the old drive in a portable shell and using that for your vault instead. At least that way a disk failure is only wipe out half of your data.
    Allan

  • I am replacing my existing SATA hard drive to a Solid State hard drive and want to image the drive, is this possible?

    I am replacing my existing 320 GB SATA hard drive that clicks and makes weird noises to a Solid State hard drive and want to image the drive, is this possible?  I then want to replace the DVD with a secondary large drive for storage.
    So I am looking for any "gotchas" that I may be unaware of.
    Thanks!

    Put the Old drive in an external notebook drive enclosure. Install the SSD in your computer. Boot from your Old drive's Recovery HD:
    Boot to the Recovery HD:
    Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the COMMAND and R keys until the menu screen appears. Alternatively, restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager screen appears. Select the Recovery HD and click on the downward pointing arrow button.
    Clone Lion/Mountain Lion using Restore Option of Disk Utility
         1. Select Disk Utility from the main menu then press the Continue
             button.
         2. Select the destination volume from the left side list.
         3. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
         4. Select the destination volume from the left side list and drag it
             to the Destination entry field.
         5. Select the source volume from the left side list and drag it to
             the Source entry field.
         6. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    Destination means the New SSD. Source means the external Old hard drive.
    Set the new Startup Disk to the SSD and restart the computer.
    This process clones both your old OS X volume and the Recovery HD volume to the SSD. You can use a similar process to clone the SSD to the new hard drive you will install.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Getting a larger hard drive...and want to upgrade to Tiger...help!

    Hello everyone! I have a dualie MDD with the stock 60 gig hard drive that I want to upgrade. I'd like a 200 or 250 gig hard drive. Once I have the new hard drive installed, I'd like to upgrade to Tiger. But I'm lost as to how this process works. I kn

  • Data execution prevention error message

    Hi iTunes launched normally but when I closed it, data execution prevention error message appeared.  I am running Vista.  Please help.

  • Shortcuts for Telephony Toolbar Buttons in IC WebClient release 5.2 (2006s)

    Hi. Has anyone done Assigning hotkeys or shortcuts to Telephony Toolbar Buttons in IC WebClient release 5.2 (2006s)??? This function was possible in the previous release until 5.0 (WinClient) as “Function Key Assignment”. And in CRM 5.2 we have a pos

  • Bapi for FB60 - Park an invoice

    Hi gurus, Im trying to park an invoice in transaction FB60. i allready tried an batch inout but it's giving me an error, that i can't park an invoice using a batch input in transaction FB60... Don't know why, if someone can explain me why i cant park

  • How to obtain CMYK code from a pattern swatch?

    Anyone know how this can be done? when I click on a pattern swatch it says its cmyk is black (regarldess of the color it actually is).