Old Time capsule as external hard drive and hub?

I am thinking about purchasing a new AirPort Extreme.  I have an old Time Capsule that I would like to repurpose as an external hard drive attached to the new AirPort Extreme.  Would I still be able to use the Ethernet ports on the Time Capsule as a router to provide Internet access to a computer or printer? I am currently using all the ports on the Time Machine (Ethernet and USB) and wonder if I need a hub (Ethernet or USB) to now connect the Time Machine to an Airport Express and still handle all the existing connections or if the Time Machine can act as the hub.

You can just plug the TC in bridge mode into your new Extreme or express.. you swapped terms freely.. Express however has only one LAN port.. and the TC will still need to use one port to connect leaving you 3 WAN ports.
If you buy the Extreme it has 3 LAN ports.. one of which will be used for the connection and so you will add 2 LAN ports for usage on the network.. if that is not enough simply buy a gigabit switch.
BTW if you buy an express it has 100mbit ports not gigabit.. so I do not recommend the express.. you will slow everything down 10x.
You will gain a USB so if 2 is enough you will not need a USB hub.

Similar Messages

  • Can i use time capsule for external h drive and also for time machine?

    Can i use time capsule for external h drive and also for time machine?

    Hello, vascocaco.
    If I understand correctly, you're wondering if you can use your Time Capsule's internal hard disk both for Time Machine backups and as an ordinary drive. Is this your question?
    You can, but Time Machine backups may take longer.
    To do it, you should partition your Time Capsule's hard disk to create one volume for the backups and one for other files.

  • How to backup MacBook Pro without AirPort Time Capsule or External hard drive

    How to backup MacBook Pro without AirPort Time Capsule or External hard drive

    This is crude but if you need a work around, just plug the USB drive directly into the iMac.. copy the files to it.. then plug it into the TC.
    You also do not need to use the TC as an intermediary between your iMac and MBP.. just turn on sharing in the computer.. so you can directly copy files from one to the other.. Macs have public access directory preconfigured for each user account.
    As far as mounting the TC..
    In finder use Go, Connect to server.. and type.
    AFP://TCname or TCipaddress
    Where TCname is the actual name of the TC.. I strongly recommend you follow SMB network rules.. ie if your TC has a name like
    Fred Blog's Time Capsule 2445566.
    It is too long.. it has spaces and it has non-alphanumeric characters.
    Shorten it to FredTC
    No spaces no characters that are NOT alphanumeric.
    TCIPaddress is simply the standard IP.
    You can also use CIFS://TCname which according to the article forces the connection back to SMB1 rather than SMB2 which as usual is broken.
    But I would definitely use AFP if possible. I cannot understand the decision to move to SMB as standard.

  • Using Time Capsule as external hard drive

    Hi.  I have a Mac Book Pro, and external hard drive, and now, a Time Capsule.  Since I don't have a Mac, all photos and music (occasional backups, etc.) have been stored on the one external hard drive.  I got the Time Capsule to replace the external hard drive as primary (keeping it as secondary)–in addition to using the Time Machine.
    If I'm understanding correctly, I open finder, open Shared>AirPort>Data–and then drag and drop all the files currently on the external hard drive onto this window?  Is this correct?  Will it COPY, and be accessibe, and not cause problems? 
    Will it mean, as I hope it means, that my MacBook and iPad will be able to open and use iTunes and iPhoto through this AirPort?  (Instead of having to plug-in the external drive.)
    I'd love to use the Time Machine as well.  But can hold off, continuing to back up only occassionally, since this dual purposing may not to be advised?
    Thank you for your guidance.

    Will there be a problem running Time Machine in the back ground while using the Time Capsule's internal hard drive manually?
    No.
    Thus far, instead of using Time Machine in an automated mode, I've turned it on when I want to make a new back-up.  Will it be necessary to run Time Machine in manual mode only or can I use its automated feature?
    Or–I may be seeing the light–will running the two in tandem allow me to save each new back-up on both devices simultaneously, keeping both drives up to date?
    I would suggest that you consider changing your backup strategy. Time Machine was designed to be an automatic "run and forget" operation that performs incremental backups of your Mac's internal hard drive. It will also backup an external hard drive attached directly to your Mac. Running it manually is not very effecient and you stand the chance of not getting a very recent (they run once an hour) backup when you need it.
    For Time Machine I would suggest that you continue to use your external hard drive as is and dedicate your new Time Capsule for Time Machine backups. If you still need more external storage, you can always add additional external USB hard drives to the USB port on the Time Capsule.
    Even better you will also want to include a second "full-clone" method to your backup strategy. This method will make a full copy of your Mac's internal disk drive that is bootable. Why do this? In case your Mac has a fatal hard disk crash, you can use the clone backup to boot your Mac back up and continue to use it within seconds. Without the clone backup, you would first need to install a new drive, then load a fresh copy of OS X, and then, perform a restore from Time Machine. This can take a while.
    To perform these clone backups, I would recommend that you get another external USB hard drive with a capacity at least twice that of your current internal drive. I use Western Digital My Passport drives for this purpose, but any similar drive should do. To create the clone backup I would suggest using either SuperDuper! or Carbon Copy Cloner.
    I would suggest that you create a new clone backup at least once a month or more often if your data is critical to you. Just connect a dedicated clone drive to any available USB port on your Mac and run the clone software to make the clone backup.

  • Can I use old time machine as external hard drive

    I just bought the new 2 TB time machine, and I have an old 2 TB time machine.  Can I use the old TM as an external hard drive?  If so,  do I just use a usb cable to connect it to my computer?  Thanks for help. 

    You cannot use it by USB.. 
    You can use it via the network.. bridge the old TC and plug it by ethernet into the new one.
    You can then access it and use it via network the same as the new TC.

  • Using Time Capsule as external hard drive on a PC, and beyond...

    I need to achieve two separate things with my new 500GB TC. The first is to send it to a friend on the other side of the country for her to use Time Capsule with her PC as an external hard drive.
    I then want to take those files (once sent back to me from CA), and put them on my computer. After that I just want to use Time Capsule with Time Machine, but I'm pretty sure I can figure that set-up out.
    My question is, is this possible? And if so, what is the easiest process to tell my PC friend in order for her to connect Time Capsule as an external?
    The reason I am attempting to do this is because I didn't see a need to buy an external and TC as well. The guy at the Mac store said it would be easy to do this, but I'm rather computer illiterate.
    That being said, I apologize for my ignorance in regards to the use of Time Capsule, but any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
    Brody M. Nasse

    Well, you just hook the Time Capsule up (either wirelessly or wired via ethernet) and for the PC you will want to install AirPort Utility, run it, and then she will be able to copy files to it. Then when it gets back to you you can run AirPort Utility (it is located in Applications/Utilities) and then access the files she put on your Time Capsule.

  • 2TB Time Capsule or External Hard Drive for use with Mac MINI and AppleTV

    Hi,
    My current setup is I have a 1TB Hard Drive linked to my intel Mac Mini via FireWire 400, the Mini shares my music and films through iTunes so that my AppleTV can pick them up.
    All devices are connected to an AEBS 802.11n (early model) via Cat6 Gigabit cables.
    As I have run out of space and am looking for a bigger drive, I wanted to know if I would be able to use the 2TB Time Capsule to hold my films and be able to stream them to the Mac Mini so that it may stream them through iTunes to the AppleTV.
    The theory of if should work, as the devices are all Gigabit capable and connected by high quality Cat6 leads their shouldn't be network bandwith issues, I am just unsure of how quickly the TimeCapsule can read stored data from a hard drive and transmit, some of my films are HD and run 4GB plus.
    The obvious answers is just to buy a bigger hard drive with FW400, however I would like to reduce the number of boxes I have under the TV, I plan to upgrade my AEBS to the latest one anyway so just thought it made sense to explore this option.
    looking forward to hearing what you have to say.

    Hello,
    It should work in theory, but the disk access time of the TC is much slower. I was setup like you are with an external drive connected to a Mini via FW and I had true Gigabit transfer between computers.
    When my hard drive failed I sold my Linksys gigabit router and bought a TC to reduce the number of boxes, but I soon learned that the read/write speed on a TC is a little bit faster than on a thumb drive! Not that great. All my machines are also connected with Cat6.
    It's still OK to watch a movie though, but transferring 10+ Gb is a pain.

  • Time capsule with external hard drive

    My wife and I just recently became an all Mac family and I am looking into backing up our files.  We have approximatly 1 TB of Photos and 1 TB of Music/Movies.  We are photographers (well, my wife is, I just take blurry photos) and so we expect the size of our Photos to grow.
    We both have Macbook Pros and a mac mini (1 TB of storage).  Connected to our mini is a an 8 TB external hard drive currently set up as a Raid 10, so I have effectivly 4 TB storage with 4 TB of back up.  My plan was to buy an Air Port Extreme to replace our 4 year old wireless router, and I see some of the Air Port Extreme's have time capsul storage built in.
    My question is, our photos, music and movies will be kept on my EHD, which is mirrored and will make its own back up.  Is it worth buying an Air Port Extreme with time capsule to back up everything?  We will primarly be keeping programs word documents and home school stuff on the Mini and everything on our Macbook Pros will be files we take from the EHD. 
    Also, should I plug the EHD into the Air Port Extreme or the Mini?
    I formated the EHD on the mini, so it is set up as journaled, not FAT32.

    Connected to our mini is a an 8 TB external hard drive currently set up as a Raid 10, so I have effectivly 4 TB storage with 4 TB of back up. 
    I would quibble with you on the use of the word backup.. Mirror yes.. you have a mirror.. but that does not represent a backup. But you also suggest later that you have a separate backup as well .. if so you have not listed what exactly this is.
    The issue is if you delete a file.. it is deleted from the array.. if you manage to corrupt a file.. it is corrupted in the array.. worse yet.. if you corrupt a library.. very real possibility with the way apple stores files.. and I do hope your are storing original RAW versions.. so the library will then be corrupted in both sections of the array.
    How is this connected to the mini? I hope it is a recent mini and using thunderbolt??
    The best backup imho is a 4TB drive plugged into the array by usb or whatever is the fastest port it has.. esata would be great.. expensive but thunderbolt even better. Does the software with the array have some inbuilt backup?? They are usually the best way to do it. I would even consider a second cheap USB stored offsite.. friends house. Thieves love those big disk arrays.. they are worth a lot of money.. and they collect your TC/AE along with the rest.
    Now all this might be already part of what you are doing so please take it simply that you didn't list it.
    My question is, our photos, music and movies will be kept on my EHD, which is mirrored and will make its own back up.  Is it worth buying an Air Port Extreme with time capsule to back up everything?  We will primarly be keeping programs word documents and home school stuff on the Mini and everything on our Macbook Pros will be files we take from the EHD. 
    Also, should I plug the EHD into the Air Port Extreme or the Mini?
    I formated the EHD on the mini, so it is set up as journaled, not FAT32.
    You can use Time Machine in the notebooks to do a backup of the current configuration of them. Without needing to do the backup of the EHD which is really too big to do effectively. TM is very good at keeping incremental backups.
    A Time Capsule is good value considering the price of the hard disk now.. so you can buy an Extreme and run it with USB drive.. but the TC with inbuilt drive is a better option in that the drive speed of the internal far superior to the usb2 drive.
    The new AC models are still somewhat buggy.. I think I would wait a bit for Apple to get their act together.. a few months probably. Of course I only see the people with issues here.. but the firmware is still immature.
    I read a review recently by a guy I respect on our local forum.
    http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum-replies.cfm?t=2125865
    Compared to the Asus N66U model.. the AE wasn't even in the same class. And that is not AC but just 900mbps (so called) N wireless. That the AE was totally outclassed is somewhat of a surprise.. they are basically identical.. the chipset both use is standard broadcom. That means Apple has tried to do funny stuff instead of sticking with the broadcom OEM linux firmware.. they have to rewrite it in NetBSD.. and this is going to take some time to debug.
    For now you can use TM to network drive,, just as easily as to a TC.
    See http://code.stephenmorley.org/articles/time-machine-on-a-network-drive/
    This is plainly opinionated.. and others might be in better position to post.. so go ahead and tear me to shreds.. but I would take great care.. before leaping at new edge technology.. unless you like the bleeding edge.

  • Time Capsule as external hard-drive, as back-up drive with Time Machine

    Two questions today:
    I understand that I can use the Time Capsule as an external hard-drive while using it as my back-up location, using Time Machine. It has been suggested that to do this, it is best to partition the Time Capsule to prevent the TM program from confusing the files it manages, the data files from the backed-up files. (I hope I got that right.) I believe I read in this forum that one can partition the TC after the fact, and not destroy any data on it. Is this possible? A clerk at the Apple Store in San Francisco told me that I would want to partition, but that it would require that I erase the TC. Which to believe?
    Secondly, how does TM create the back-ups? I have used SuperDuper and appreciated the difference in how (and what) it backs up. My example: my first back-up involved having an 80gb external drive attached to my computer and TM backed up both my HD and the External Drive. I then turned off the TM. Today I turned it on and allowed it to back-up every hour as it is designed to do, but without the 80gb External drive attached. When I checked the newer back-ups, they all showed the original configuration of HD and 80gb external drive.
    So for it's incremental back-ups, does TM back up new files and updated files without deleting missing files? Is it an additive process? Or does it at some point delete missing files from it's most recent back-up? Or since it recognized that it was backing-up two different drives, it will always keep them separate, maintaining one (80gb External drive), even as it backs-up and changes the other (the HD)?
    O.K. a third request. Has anyone published a manual on TM and/or TC with this level of understanding so we can make the most of it's 1 TB storage capacity?
    Thanks in advance, LeRoy

    LeroyHoward wrote: So, does this mean that TM never deletes a file?
    It will when it starts to run out of space and it should likely be the oldest deleted files first.
    As I understand it, as long as I have a multi-linked file icon on the TM, I have the original data. And everytime the TM backs-up, it recreates every multi-linked file icon on the previous back-up. Right? So, if you delete a file by mistake, you can go back and find it. But I see a contradiction here. If you delete it on your desktop, shouldn't it be deleted from the back-up of that desktop? We expect it to be on earlier back-ups, but not the most recent one right? So, eventually as the TM fills up and begins deleting earlier back-ups, that data will be lost.
    The newest timeline will not point/display the deleted file(s), but it still exists on the backup until the backup drive fills up and needs to erase deleted data.
    I'm trying to understand this aspect of the TC and TM, because we want to use it as both an external HD and as one of our back-ups. Any light you can shed on this will be greatly appreciated.
    Thanks, LeRoy
    Read Glenn's response to dedicating TC to TM backup and the difficulty in partitioning the TC HDD.
    Glenn Carter wrote:
    However, this is not an option for Time Capsule users as there is not an easy way of partitioning the Time Capsules’ internal had disk without elaborate effort. In this case, use the Time Capsule hard disk solely for Time Machine backups. Then attach an additional hard disk to the Time Capsules USB port and store additional files there. This added disk will still be available to all Macs that can access the Time Capsule.
    This works to share the files on the USB HDD attached to TC, but if you want this drive backed up by TM (and this drive is formatted HFS+), then it needs to remain plugged into the Mac directly for TM to back it up.

  • Copying data to time capsule from external hard drive too slow....

    is there a way to make the transfer of data from a external hard drive that is plugged into the time capsule, transfer faster?
    im transfering 11gb and it says it will take 3 hours to complete.
    there must be a faster way to transfer all my data, in less time?
    thanks,

    If you are copying any important information to the TC directly (example: iTunes library, iPhoto library, Movies), please make sure that you implement a backup solution for these files. The Airport Utility has an Archive function which will backup the entire TC to an externally attached USB drive.
    For faster data transfer, you could try connecting your Mac to the TC with Gb Ethernet and than attach the external USB drive to your Mac. I would expect a Mac connected drive to transfer faster to the TC (faster than a USB drive connected to the TC) as the Mac has much more memory and compute power.
    You could connect the drive to your Mac and observe the transfer rate before waiting 3 hours on the other configuration.

  • Time capsule as external hard drive doesn't get backed up by Time machine

    hi my set up is as follows:
    iMac 1 TB, with a time capsule 1 TB used as an external hard drive to store media and iTunes files. My problem is that I have a 3TB external hard drive which I used to back up my iMac. I had thought it would also back up the time capsule automatically (yes it is not in in the exclude section on time machine). Unfortunately, it does not appear to recognise that time capsule is merely a hard drive. Any fixes? Help gratefully received as I really need the media files backed up in case the time capsule hard drive fails (which I believe is quite common).

    I answerered on your other thread.. TM cannot back network drives.. never has been able to.. and probably never will be able to, as it depends on the HFS+ format structure.
    Use a third party backup.. superduper.. CCC.. plenty of others available.. easy with media files as you are probably not changing them often.. a simply file copy via terminal can probably work fine much like we would script backup files with robocopy on windows. I am sure such products will exist.
    Here we go, a script wrapper for rsync.
    http://www.davidwaring.net/projects/backup.html

  • Want to use Time Capsule as external hard drive / Time Capsule als externe Festplatte

    Can somebody tell me what steps I have to take to use my TC as an external hard drive? Thanks! / Kann mir jemand einmal genau erklären, wie ich meine Time Capsule als externe Festplatte für meine Fotos etc. nutzen kann? Mein 128 GB Mac Book Air kommt nämlich an seine Grenzen:) Brauche ich dafür eine weitere externe Festplatte oder kann ich den Speicherplatz nutzen, den die TC hat und auf dem im Moment immer die automatischen Bachups über Time Machine gespeichert werden? Danke!

    There might be a big improvement in the new photo app.
    The OS X Yosemite v10.10.3 update includes the new Photos app and improves the stability, compatibility, and security of your Mac.
    With Photos you can:
    Browse your photos by time and location in Moments, Collections, and Years views
    Navigate your library using convenient Photos, Shared, Albums, and Projects tabs
    Store all of your photos and videos in iCloud Photo Library in their original format and in full resolution
    Access your photos and videos stored in iCloud Photo Library from your Mac, iPhone, iPad, or iCloud.com with your web browser
    Perfect your photos with powerful and easy-to-use editing tools that optimize with a single click or slider, or allow precise adjustments with detailed controls
    Create professional-quality photo books with simplified bookmaking tools, new Apple-designed themes, and new square book formats
    Purchase prints in new square and panoramic sizes
    It’s easy to upgrade your iPhoto library to Photos – just open the app to get started. To learn more about Photos, visit: https://www.apple.com/osx/photos/

  • Using time capsule as external hard drive with air

    About to go full Mac, looking for seemless integration and organization of music and photos. Can a pairing of Airbook with Time Capsule work not just as backup by as an external hard drive to acces all of my things? Adding an external HD to the Time Capsule seems excessive.  Hearing that iphoto doesn't really like to be anywhere by on local drive in OS. I'm not very Mac litereate yet so any heavfy kung-fu manipulation might be more than I can bargain for at this time.
    Thanks!
    Toshiba Satellite
    Extreme
    iphone 5
    ipad original
    ipad mini (x2)

    Well, you just hook the Time Capsule up (either wirelessly or wired via ethernet) and for the PC you will want to install AirPort Utility, run it, and then she will be able to copy files to it. Then when it gets back to you you can run AirPort Utility (it is located in Applications/Utilities) and then access the files she put on your Time Capsule.

  • Airport Time capsule as external hard drive too?

    Can the new airport time capsule work as back up and as an external hard drive? If I have photos saved in the cloud online and put onto time capsule, can I then delete from my mac and still have them on time capsule?

    Apple do not recommend having the iphoto library (same applies to Aperture) on network drive.
    iphoto network no no.
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1198
    It's recommended that you store your iPhoto library on a locally mounted hard drive. Storing your iPhoto library on a network share can lead to poor performance, data corruption, or data loss.
    You cannot use TC as external drive it is now and forevermore a network drive.
    There are also backup issues.. since Time Machine cannot backup files on a network drive.. nor can TC back itself up. 
    It is much better to use an actual external hard disk.

  • Can i use time capsule as external hard drive for both mac and windows

    I have a mac book pro, ipad and iphone and ipod and a windows pc
    Can i use time capsule as a external hard disk only for all of the above ( including windows ) without the back up activity for mac ?

    You cannot access the TC from iOS devices without a browser. eg filebrowser.
    Can i use time capsule as a external hard disk only for all of the above ( including windows ) without the back up activity for mac ?
    Yes, with the following proviso.. the TC is not able to back itself up.. so if you store files on the TC without backups one day you will discover all your files are gone because of a hard drive failure of the TC. TM also cannot backup TC.. so you will need to buy a proper backup software.
    It is also much slower than a real NAS..
    And windows can be a bit painful.. especially windows 8.. other versions should work if you spend the time getting everything set right.

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