Macbook Hard drive exchange?

I have 2 Macbooks and one had died.  I tried to switch the hard drives in order to salvage my information.  The computer wouldn't boot with the new hard drive--maybe because I also tried to upgrade the memory. 
Dead computer is:
Apple MacBook 13.3" Core 2 duo 2.13   2 GB, non-Apple hard drive
Working computer is:
Apple MacBook 13.3" Core 2 2.0 GHz 1 GB DDR2 160 GB Bad Optical 10.5
Shouldn't I be able to take the 2 GB memory and the hard drive and update the Core 2 duo 2.0 machine??? I really only need the hard drive to boot in order to salvage my information.

If I may, there is another way to do this. Put the hard drive - the one from the dead computer - into a suitable external enclosure, and connect that to the other computer. The drive will appear as an external and you can do with it as you please, including of course copying files.
At the end of the process you will have an external drive that you could use for extra storage, or even as a Time Machine backup drive.
Here's an example of an enclosure: http://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-2-5-Inch-External-Aluminum-Enclosure/dp/B00E362W9O /ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1390071737&sr=8-1&keywords=external+hard+drive+enclosure +2.5

Similar Messages

  • I would like to know if you have to back up a macbook hard drive, can I use a external hard drive that has been previously used to back up several pc 's, or is it best to have a separate external drive for the Mac?

    I would like to know if you have to back up a macbook hard drive, can I use a external hard drive that has been previously used to back up several pc 's, or is it best to have a separate external drive for the Mac?

    In the Mac side of things, backups usually come in two flavors: clones or incrementals.
    A bootable clone is a bit-for-bit copy of all essential files in the startup volume. If using the Lions, clones can be made using CarbonCopyCloner or just plain old Disk Utility. These backups represent the safest protection of your info, but take the longest to do. Recovery is an inverse process: you copy the clone back into the internal drive.
    Incremental backups start with a complete backup of the startup volume and only copy whatever changed from the previous run. OS X includes the fully integrated Time Machine backup utility to do this. It is extremely easy to do and takes the least amount of time. Recovery is another matter altogether since you have to start with a freshly installed instance of the OS and have to apply all intervening backups to bring the result to the latest saved version.
    As for where the backup takes place, the recommended media is an external dedicated drive or drives connected via the fastest interface available on your Mac: Thunderbolt, USB3, Firewire, or USB2. Network-based backups, wired or wireless, are attractive but may not offer the same performance and hence take longer. Also important to note that the entire drive need not be completely dedicated to a single backup. The Mac's EFI firmware infrastructure allows for an unlimited number of partitions on a hard drive and each can be used for either type of backups.
    Holler if you need specifics on how to do each. This was just an executive summary.

  • What All Do I Need If I Want To Upgrade My Macbook Hard Drive?

    hey guys.
    i've tried reading up a little but i was hoping someone (or a few people) could give me some straight up answers.
    if i want to upgrade my macbook hard drive what all do i need? just the hard drive? or are there other pieces?
    also.. whats a good 250GB one? i found this one on ebay: http://cgi.ebay.com/NEW-2-5-Western-Digital-250GB-SATA-Harddrive_W0QQitemZ220271 134397QQihZ012QQcategoryZ158853QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
    is that one any good? i just know the name (Western Digital) and have heard good things about them...
    any comments are welcome.
    thanks!
    beau

    I got a 320GB sata 2.5" hard drive and installed it myself, its easy. I also got a caddy so I can use my old 120GB drive as a back up. Make sure u have everything backed up! Seagate and western digital drives are most popular. I asked similar q and got this answer"
    Extended Hard Drive Preparation
    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 Installer menu (Utilities menu for Tiger or Leopard.)
    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. Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID (only required for Intel Macs) then click on the OK button. Set the number of partitions from the dropdown menu (use 1 partition unless you wish to make more.) Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Partition button and wait until the volume(s) mount on the Desktop.
    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.
    Steps 4-6 are optional but should be used on a drive that has never been formatted before, if the format type is not Mac OS Extended, if the partition scheme has been changed, or if a different operating system (not OS X) has been installed on the drive.
    If your backup is bootable, then boot from the external drive and use SuperDuper to clone it back to the newly installed drive.
    Mac Pro 2.66 Ghz; MacBook Pro C2D 2.33 Ghz; MacBook Pro 2.16 Ghz Mac OS X (10.5.4) Intel iMac C2D 17 "; MacBook 2.0 Ghz.
    And
    Now, to install the hard drive, follow http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Mac/MacBook-Core-Duo/Hard-Drive-Replacement/86/5/

  • MacBook hard drive is full again. Replaced original hard drive with a Samsung SSD 840 Pro Series 256GB hard drive about 18 mo. ago, but my MacBook is now already saying that my hard drive is full again.  13in. Alum. Late 2008 MacBook

    My MacBook hard drive is full again. I have a 13in. Aluminum, Late 2008 MacBook, and about 18 months ago (in October 2013), I replaced the original hard drive with a Samsung SSD 840 Pro Series 256GB hard drive. However, my MacBook is now already saying that my hard drive is full again.  When I check "System Information," under "Storage," it states the following:  Audio 52.02 GB; Movies 33.68GB; Photos 43.13GB; Apps 14.76 GB; Backups 174.4 MB; and Other 96.39GB.
    Also, at home, I have an Apple Time Capsule 4th Generation 2TB that I use as my wireless router, and I also use it for automatic backup via Time Machine.  And when I first purchased Time Capsule, the first time I connected Time Capsule, Time Machine asked if I would like to use it to back up my files, and I clicked, "Use as Backup Disk."  And that's really all I've ever done with Time Capsule.
    In addition, I also have a LaCie Porsche Design P'9223 1TB external hard drive.  I have copied my MacBook's hard drive onto my LaCie external hard drive.
    Does anyone have any suggestions?  Obviously the Audio, Movies, Photos, and Apps are taking up a lot of space... Any suggestions re: what I can do with Audio, Movies, Photos, and Apps?  And what about the Other?  Other is taking up 96.39 GB. What is Other, and what can I do about it? 
    And what about partitioning my hard drive... Is that something I should do?  Should I partition, or configure, my MacBook's internal hard drive differently?  And should I partition, or configure, my external hard drive?  And if I need to partition, or configure, my MacBook's internal hard drive differently, how do I setup Time Machine to backup per any such changes?  Same thing for my external hard drive?   
    13in. Aluminum, Late 2008 MacBook, 250 GB (with upgraded Samsung SSD 840 Pro Series 256GB hard drive)
    Processor 2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo
    Memory 2 GB 1067 MHz DDR3
    OS X 10.9.5
    plus
    Apple Time Capsule 4th Generation 2TB
    LaCie Porsche Design P'9223 1TB external hard drive
    Thank you for your help.

    Partitioning makes no sense. You have a drawer full of stuff. Split it into two smaller drawers and you have two smaller drawers full of stuff.
    Decide what you can store on external storage - your iPhoto/Aperture/Lightroom libraries can all be stored on externals, as can your iTunes Libraries and so on. Do you need to carry 30 gigs of movies with you all the time? You  can get portable drives the size of an iPhone these days.

  • 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 change my macbook hard drive to a bigger drive

    I want to change my macbook hard drive to a bigger drive, its a duo core. I would like to know what make is best and where do i get the tools for it eg screwdriver, static protector . Where do I order my drive from.
    Can I change my drive on this model. I'm in the uk. thanks for the help

    These are very good instructions on How to Upgrade Your MacBook's Hard Drive.
    Here is the Apple DIY hard drive replacement instructions.
    The only step they left out is the need for a number 8 Torx Driver to swap a shield from the old drive to the new.
    Tools can be ordered on the net or check with some friends you never know what they might have. The hardest one to find will be the Torx driver but some radio shacks carry them.
    OWC carries an assotment of nice drives. Check the bottom of the page in the link below.
    http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/memory/MacBook/DDR2/
    This will give you an idea of what you need.
    Here is a place in the UK you can check.
    http://www.2ndchancepc.co.uk/int-hdd.html
    Message was edited by: First Magus

  • MacBook hard drive transform into an external hard drive problem

    My macbook pro early 2008 just died. The mother circuit fried and well its not usuable anymore and the repair for it are like 900$. Having alot of data in my macbook hard drive , i ask the guy that work at the genius bar to take out of macbook hard drive.
    then i install the hard drive in a enclosure kit to transform it into a portable external hard drive. My problem is:
    It only read the Window partition info and doesnt even give the choice to view my Mac partition.
    i divided my Macbook HD with bootcamp and i divided the window partition to only have 30 G and the rest (280g) to leave it for my Mac exploitation.
    The HD cant seen to find my Mac partition and only shows the data i got on my Window partition, i was wondering wat can i do to get my HD to see the data of my MAC partition
    Thx in advance for the answers

    There are third party programs for Windows to read HFS+, and I won't promise anything, but a Linux LiveCD may work as well. I don't have any names off the top of my head for those third party programs, but google something like "Windows HFS+" and you should be able to come up with a few leads.
    But in general, yes, you'll need a Mac to read a Mac partition.

  • Can I use the Macbook hard drive in a PC notebook?

    I've decided to join the Apple community by getting the unibody Macbook very soon (probably after I see whats new at WWDC). I see that its cheaper to upgrade the hard drive and memory on a 3rd party website but I want to know if the 250gb macbook hard drive will work in a PC notebook? I have a Dell Inspiron E1505 with a Serial ATA connector for the hard drive and I see that the Macbook also uses a Serial ATA hard drive. Just wondering if this technique worked for anyone that tried it out.
    Message was edited by: JustinJ198806

    Yes, but you will need to reformat the drive for your PC which cannot read/write a Mac formatted drive. There's nothing special about the drives used in Macs. They come from the same manufacturers as any other notebook drive.

  • My Apple Macbook hard drive crashed and I had to replace. Now trying to reload CS5 and having issues. When I click download from Adobe download page, a screen pops up saying "Access Denied". I have serial number, but don't even get to a page to enter. Ple

    My Apple Macbook hard drive crashed and I had to replace. Now trying to reload CS5 and having issues. When I click download from Adobe download page, a screen pops up saying "Access Denied". I have serial number, but don't even get to a page to enter. Please help…Thanks!!

    Make sure you have cookies enabled and clear your cache.  If it continues to fail try using a different browser.
    You can also download the trial version of the software thru the page linked below and then use your current serial number to activate it.
    Be sure to follow the steps outlined in the Note: Very Important Instructions section on the download pages at this site and have cookies enabled in your browser or else the download will not work properly.
    CS5: http://prodesigntools.com/all-adobe-cs5-direct-download-links.html

  • Expand my Macbook hard drive using WiFI?

    My MacBook hard drive was full so I moved some photos onto an external drive.  This has created additional space but to access those photos, I now need to plug the external drive back into the MacBook and change the iphoto library. 
    Is there a better way to expand my MacBook hard drive?  I'd like to set up a external hard drive which I could access (upload and download) over WiFi (I have an airport express at the moment) and potentially also be able to access from any of the other devices in my home (macbook, iphone, and soon apple TV too).
    Is there also a way I could then access that hard drive from outside of my WiFi network?
    Would iCloud be an alternate option?
    Thanks!

    A bootable clone is easy:
    download an app called Carbon Copy Cloner, download the free version, it will do the trick: www.bombich.com. Or download SuperDuper (free).
    Make a bootable clone.
    Buy a harddisk (I advise the simple, straight and quality Toshiba (see above)) and buy a simple holder that will connect to your USB port, on the OWC site
    http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/NewerTech/Voyager/Hard_Drive_Dock
    (I bought another such holder that was a bit cheaper, but not at OWC).
    Start CCC and set the clone spec, in the left field choose your internal disk, in the right field choose the external disk. Clone, etc see above.
    About RAM: it is imperative that you choose the EXACT specification for your MB, you will find it on OWC:
    http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/memory/Apple_MacBook_MacBook_Pro/Upgrade
    it should do by replacing the two Apple chips with a pair 2GB chips.

  • Happy Birthday from Apple! Heres your gift.... A dead macbook hard drive!

    Well i woke up this morning, the morning of my 31st birthday. As usual on a saturday i booted up my macbook and checked out the latest news etc etc etc. The laptop was running normally. An hour or so later after the macbook had been sat in one place for a little while i moved it to another desk. As i started to type i realised that Firefox wasnt repsonding so i tried to force-quit. After about 5 minutes of the machine being unresponsive and me thinking, oh crap the hard drive is probably dead i powered it off. When i turned it back on after a while i got the lovely folder/question mark icon. At which point i thought to myself... i hate it when i right!
    Thanks for the present Apple, you're the best!
    Can you guys let me know what capacity macbook compatible drives are up to now. I seem to remember seeing an article saying that 250gb 2.5 sata drives are here but i also remember hearing there are slightly different size 2.5 drives. Any tips would be helpful. Im going to do my own research here but as its saturday i doubt its worth ordering one today and my local apple store will no doubt charge a fortune going by what i was quoted to get my dodgy system fan sorted!
    Cheers!

    Never mind. I found a 250gb hd on overclockers.co.uk. Before i ordered it i called my local apple dealer for a price. As expected they were too expensive but they did tell me that they had already sold 2 macbook hard drives today. Must be something in the air in exeter!

  • Macbook hard drive crashed, i lost windows for mac, bought a disc when i got the mac, no longer have the disc, need my apps, don't wanna pay for it again.  know how to get it quick without having to give my mac to the genius bar at apple store overnight

    macbook hard drive crashed, i lost windows for mac, bought a disc when i got the mac, no longer have the disc, need my apps, don't wanna pay for it again.  know how to get it quick without having to give my mac to the genius bar at apple store overnight?

    What is it you need - Windows installer disc or something else?  Your question is unclear.  Could you be more specific?

  • My macbook hard drive stopped working and I loaded another hard drive and can access time capsule but it doesn't show any of my old files and I don't understand why

    My 7 year old macbook hard drive stopped working and I put in another hard drive but when I went to restore my information from airport time capsule it only shows today and nothing older.  Help?

    Did you do a TM backup after you installed the disk? It may write over the previous backup.. but it should actually start a new one.
    Read the info about using migration.. see http://pondini.org/TM/Home.html
    Or the Mac is probably looking at the backup as from a different computer.
    See the details of how to use TM to restore to a different Mac.
    Q17 here. http://pondini.org/TM/FAQ.html
    I would read through 14-17 carefully.
    You should be able to do a full recovery of the TM backup to a USB drive plugged into the computer.

  • I am trying to open space in my macbook hard drive, so I deleted files and after emptying the trash bin the amount of Gigs didn't increase, why? Where can I go and delete those files?

    I am trying to open space in my macbook hard drive, so I deleted files and after emptying the trash bin the amount of Gigs didn't increase, why? Where can I go and delete those files?

    Did you do a secure empty trash? SHIFT COMMAND DELETE, they will be over wriiten. Are you deleting docs as they aren't much space, videos,pictures,music use much more space.
    You can move those fiels to an external "archive" drive to save them then delete them from your internal drive.

  • After 1T hard drive exchange, my imac works a bit strange.

    I got my 1T hard drive exchanged after received the letter from Apple to suggest 1T hard drive I had may have problem. However, after change, I found that my Imac work slower than before,some time it's freeze for 5-10 seconds. and some times when I closed the one of the taps from safari, the other tap would show the broken image from the closed tap. It make me scare whether the monitor is not going to  work any more...

    Call Apple to purchase replacement discs or order a copy of Snow Leopard from Apple's Online Store. Follow these instructions:
    Drive Preparation and Install Snow Leopard
    1. Boot from your Snow Leopard 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.
    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. Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) 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 Security 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.
    7. When completed quit DU and return to the installer. Install Snow Leopard. Once you boot from Snow Leopard you should open Software Update and install all the available updates required. After you complete this and restart the computer open the App Store application in the Dock or Applications folder.
    8. Sign into the App Store with your Apple ID and password. Purchase and download Lion.
    9. After Lion's installer downloads, install Lion.

Maybe you are looking for