Password for internal hard drive

Is there a way to password protect an additional interna/externall hard drive and use Time Machine to backup?

Hey there Dale Miller1,
It sounds like you are wanting to set up an external drive as a Time Machine backup disk that you would like to set a password for. The followint article should help you with that:
OS X Mavericks: Choose a backup disk and set encryption options
http://support.apple.com/kb/PH14110
Choose Apple menu > System Preferences, then click Time Machine.
Click the Select Backup Disk button if it’s available. Otherwise, if you already have multiple backup disks, click Add or Remove Backup Disk at the bottom of the list of disks.
Choose a disk. If you’ve already set up one or more backup disks, choose from the list of Available Disks.Every available disk and partition is listed. Time Machine can’t back up to an external disk connected to an AirPort Extreme, or to an iPod or disk formatted for Windows.
For increased security, select “Encrypt backups.” If the checkbox is dimmed, your backup disk doesn’t support encryption.Encryption is available for Time Capsules, disks attached to another Mac on your network, and disks partitioned with the GPT partition scheme and attached directly to your Mac.If the checkbox is dimmed, hold the mouse pointer on it for a moment to see an explanation. If a disk needs to be reformatted or repartitioned to support encryption, Time Machine prompts you to do so.
Click Use Disk.If you’ve already set up a disk, Time Machine asks if you want to replace the existing backup disk or use both. If you already have multiple backup disks, Time Machine adds the new disk without asking.
If Time Machine prompts you to reformat the disk, either reformat the disk in Mac OS Extended (Journaled) format, or choose a different disk.Because reformatting erases any files on the disk, do this only if you no longer need the files or have copies of them on a different disk.
If you select Encrypt, type a password for the backup disk.You may need to provide the password when you connect the disk to your Mac, or if you disconnect the disk or restart your Mac.If you’ve used a Time Capsule or networked disk for unencrypted backups and want to turn on encryption, Time Machine must first erase the unencrypted backup before starting an encrypted backup.
Thank you for using Apple Support Communities.
All the very best,
Sterling

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