Pre Purchase Question: Adding a second hard drive on a DV4t

I'm really interested in the DV4T and I was customizing online but can't seem to find any option to add or even where to purchase an internal second hard drive for the SmartBay. Could someone help,  Thanks in advance.

futurewave27 wrote:
I'm really interested in the DV4T and I was customizing online but can't seem to find any option to add or even where to purchase an internal second hard drive for the SmartBay. Could someone help,  Thanks in advance.
 The dv4 series only has 1 hard drive bay, you cannot install a second drive.  If you want to have more than one hard drive, try the dv7 series

Similar Messages

  • Question about a second hard drive..

    13" MacBook Pro, Mid 2012 (Non-Retina)
    Hello, in early December when in the Apple store, I was torn between a MacBook Air and Pro. After talking it over and hearing the basics from the Apple store guy, he mentioned how many people use the DVD Drive space in their Pros to fit a second hard drive! Now I'm all set up with my Pro, I'm wondering what kind of benefits this could have, so I have two questions...
    1.  How do I do this? Is there a spare HDD cable inside the machine? :S
    2. When I fit a new HDD in the DVD Drive space can I use it as a 'seperate backup' for the other? E.g. When on the system open Time Machine and select the other internal drive as backup.
    Also, I'm considering buying an OCZ 240GB SSD drive for my main and maxing ram to 8GB!
    Thanks for taking the time to read and potential answers! 

    Others on here have done this, you can search in the box with the blue Search button towards the upper right of the page.  But it is involved.  You should also check the impact on your warranty and AppleCare if you bought that...Apple only permits installation of ram and replacement of the hard drive under the warranty.
    There are advnatages to keeping the optical drive, such as burning disks, loading software, files, etc.  An external hard drive is a good solution to the extra storage issue, and so easy to just plug in and partition and format how you want them to work.
    I like having the option of the optical drive plus the external drive, which is why I have external drives for all of my Macs.

  • HP ENVY TouchSmart m7t-j000 Notebook PC - Adding a second hard drive

    Product Number:  E4S80AV
    I'm having a hard time finding a SATA III cable and caddy for a second hard drive for my laptop.  Any ideas?  Right now, I just have an extra 1.8 inch drive I can't use.
    Robert

    Please see HP ENVY Notebook HP ENVY TouchSmart Notebook HP ENVY 17 Notebook PC HP ENVY TouchSmart m7 Notebook P... for a complete list of parts used in these models. Additionally the MSG states;
    Hard drives
    Supports 6.35-cm (2.5-in) hard drives in 9.5-mm (.37-in) and 7.0-mm (.28-in) thicknesses (all hard drives use the same bracket)
    Customer-accessible
    Serial ATA
    Supports the following hard drives:
    ● 1-TB 5400-rpm, 9.5-mm
    ● 750-GB 5400-rpm 9.5-mm
    ● 500-GB 5400-rpm 9.5-mm and 7.0-mm
     Dual hard-drive configurations:
    ● 2TB: (1-TB 5400-rpm x 2)
    ● 1500GB: (750-GB 5400-rpm x 2)
    Please click the white KUDOS star to show your appreciation
    Frank
    {------------ Please click the "White Kudos" Thumbs Up to say THANKS for helping.
    Please click the "Accept As Solution" on my post, if my assistance has solved your issue. ------------V
    This is a user supported forum. I am a volunteer and I don't work for HP.
    HP 15t-j100 (on loan from HP)
    HP 13 Split x2 (on loan from HP)
    HP Slate8 Pro (on loan from HP)
    HP a1632x - Windows 7, 4GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6130y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6320y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240
    HP p7-1026 - Windows 7, 6GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6787c - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240

  • Adding a second hard drive. Should I use LVM?

    This particular desktop station has one single hard drive with two ext3 partitions atm.
    I read a little bit about LVM and I am wondering what I should do with that second hard drive as for a setting it up.  It will mainly be used to store media files with local network access.
    Considering it is only one hard drive (500G) is it worth using LVM?

    As always in Linux its all about what You want to do.
    So as you read LVM is another abstraction layer between hardware and software. What affects a bit performance since file systems are not created on real partitions but virtual devices provided by LVM. As benefit you gain possibility to manage freely available disk space without necessity of using a partitioning program. Actually its not possible since such programs cant handle partitions created on LVM.
    However please note that if you do not use LVM you can still manage your disk space using applications such as gparted. Of course only on those partitions that are not currently mounted.
    So this solution (LVM) becomes very handy when you often have to reorganize your disk space (moving partition using partitioning program can be very time consuming) or you just want to forget about partitioning and disk usage calculations...
    Personally I never used LVM because of this what I pointed out above. LVM gives flexibility in managing disk space but there are other ways to get it. Of course there are also users who cant live without it!

  • Adding a second hard drive for storage

    So you've added another hard drive to your system... its detected correctly in BIOS, and when you boot into Windows its listed in Device Manager, but it is not visible in My Computer and you can't save anything to it because Windows doesn't see it?
    Well, if its not partioned and formatted in a format that Windows recognises, then of course it won't!
    Its very easy to do, and as this gets asked so many times, here's a brief step by step guide. (The screenshots are shown from Windows 7, but will appear identical in Windows Vista, and very similar in Windows XP with some different wording)
    First of all, right-click Computer in your Start Menu or desktop (My Computer in Windows XP), and in the pop-out menu, select Manage.
    This will open up the Computer Management console. In the left-hand pane, under Storage, click on Disk Management (Drive Management in Windows XP). This will then bring up a list of all storage drives connected to your computer, and in the lower half you can visibly see what partitions are on each drive.
    Your new drive will be shown here, but it will show as 'Unallocated' (RAW in Windows XP).
    Right-click anywhere in the Unallocated space, and in the pop-out menu, select New Volume ('Create partition' in Windows XP). This will open a wizard to help you create and format a partition.
    First of all, you can select how big your partition is, if you want to make more than one. By default, it will select the size of the whole drive.
    Next you can assign a drive letter. Remember, if you don't assign a drive letter, then the partition will be hidden from Windows.
    Next, is where you format your partition. Best leave it at the default setting of NTFS. You can also name your new partition here if you like. A quick format usually suffices, so leave that box ticked.
    Click Finish in the next screen, and your partition will be created and formatted.
    And your new drive is ready to be used in Windows!

    'afternoon.
    i know you mentioned not needing an SSD, but if you don't use WWAN, have you at all considered an mSATA SSD installed under the keyboard? you could run the OS/swap/temp/apps from it, then use the platter drive for data/documents and keep your bay flexible for addtional HDDs or the optical drive.
    just a thought...
    English Community   Deutsche Community   Comunidad en Español   Русскоязычное Сообщество
    Community Resources: Participation Rules • Images in posts • Search (Advanced) • Private Messaging
    PM requests for individual support are not answered. If a post solves your issue, please mark it so.
    X1C3 Helix X220 X301 X200T T61p T60p Y3P • T520 T420 T510 T400 R400 T61 Y2P Y13
    I am not a Lenovo employee.

  • Adding a second hard drive to late 2008 Macbook Pro

    I have a 15"unibody Macbook Pro from Late 2008. It works great, but I only have 320 GB of storage. I would like to add an additional hard drive to store all my files on. Is this possible or do I just need to replace the current drive with a larger one?
    Thanks!

    Welcome to Apple Support Communities
    You can put a second hard disk where you have got the SuperDrive, but in that case, you will have to use an external optical drive.
    You just need a peripheral to put the hard disk and a 2'5" SATA hard disk, that can be a SSD if you want. You have the steps and parts to do that on iFixit > http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Installing+MacBook+Pro+15-Inch+Unibody+Late+2008+and +Early+2009+Dual+Hard+Drive/8526/1

  • Adding a second hard drive for my W520

    I'd like to add a second drive for my W520.  I need more space to run vmware for demonstrations.  I was reading in this article - http://www.storagereview.com/lenovo_thinkpad_w520_upgrade_guide
    That I could add a second drive by removing the cd drive and adding some kind of adapter.
    Does anyone know the par number for that adapter?
    Also, I'd like a 7200 rpm drive for this additional one - I don't need SSD.
    Oh, and a part number for that would be great, too, if you know it.
    Thanks!
    Jon

    'afternoon.
    i know you mentioned not needing an SSD, but if you don't use WWAN, have you at all considered an mSATA SSD installed under the keyboard? you could run the OS/swap/temp/apps from it, then use the platter drive for data/documents and keep your bay flexible for addtional HDDs or the optical drive.
    just a thought...
    English Community   Deutsche Community   Comunidad en Español   Русскоязычное Сообщество
    Community Resources: Participation Rules • Images in posts • Search (Advanced) • Private Messaging
    PM requests for individual support are not answered. If a post solves your issue, please mark it so.
    X1C3 Helix X220 X301 X200T T61p T60p Y3P • T520 T420 T510 T400 R400 T61 Y2P Y13
    I am not a Lenovo employee.

  • Adding a second Hard Drive for /var and /opt

    I need some help... I have an Ultra 60 with 1 36 Gig drive, Solaris 10 with Java DeskTop. I want to add a 9 Gig drive to extend /var and /opt. Below is the data on the disk (format). My question is: How do I set this disk up so the /var and the /opt can extend into the new drive and then mount the drive. I am NOT a guru on setting up HD's and have read the Solaris admin book part to help me along, I am very lost. When I installed Solaris 10 I gave the /var 15 megs. It seems Solaris 10 patch manager wants to install all the patches in /var/sadm/patch thus I am eating up the 15 megs fast. What I need to know is just how to set up the below drive... HELP!
    format> verify
    Primary label contents:
    Volume name = < >
    ascii name = <SUN9.0G cyl 4924 alt 2 hd 27 sec 133>
    pcyl = 4926
    ncyl = 4924
    acyl = 2
    nhead = 27
    nsect = 133
    Part Tag Flag Cylinders Size Blocks
    0 root wm 0 - 73 129.75MB (74/0/0) 265734
    1 swap wu 74 - 147 129.75MB (74/0/0) 265734
    2 backup wu 0 - 4923 8.43GB (4924/0/0) 17682084
    3 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0
    4 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0
    5 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0
    6 usr wm 148 - 4923 8.18GB (4776/0/0) 17150616
    7 unassigned wm 0 0 (0/0/0) 0

    Here's another idea: use Live Upgrade. I'll assume your "new" 9G disk is on /dev/dsk/c0t1d0. Use format to partition the disk with one partition, /dev/dsk/c0t1d0s0. Don't mount the new parititon. Use Live Upgrade lucreate to put the boot environment on the new partition:
    lucreate -c be1 -n be2 -m /:/dev/dsk/c0t1d0s0:ufs(You can probably come up with more useful names than "be1" and "be2"!)
    lucreate will copy over all your existing root, /usr/, /var to the new disk. This will take a while, but you can continue using your system while it runs (no need to be in single user mode.) When it's done, use luactivate to make the new boot environment active and boot it.
    This gives you a system with everything in one partition. If you want to stick with different partitions for the different systems, lucreate can do that too, see the man page and docs. I think it's more trouble than it's worth for a single-user/desktop type system.
    Once you're up on the new disk, you can look into repartitioning the old disk to get you a similar-size partition to use as a spare boot environment, and you can start using Live Upgrade for what it was designed for: letting you upgrade without taking the system down.

  • Adding A New Hard Drive

    I've been thinking about adding a second hard drive.  The problem is that I'm not sure which configuration would best fit my needs.
    Currently I have one 120GB Maxtor SATA drive which, after six months, is half full.  This leads me to conclude that eventually I'm going to fill it up.
    Since I have only this one drive and no DVD writer, I don't have any good way of backing up my drive in case something fails.  I don't have any vital data, but I've spent a long time getting my settings perfect, and I don't want to lose them.
    I also know that doing a RAID doesn't give me more space.  I know that RAID 0 basically uses two drives in parallel to double the storage efficiency, but if one drive fails, all the data on both is lost.  I also know that RAID 1 copies all changes to the second hard drive and thus also does not increase my overall storage space.
    What are my other options?  If I buy another SATA drive, what ways do I have to copy my entire disk onto the new one?  How does XP handle installation on the new drive?  How do I switch between drives?  I was thinking that I could put all my large music and video files on the new drive and then optimize my old drive for my games.  This will still make it possible for me to listen to my music in Winamp while playing a game, right?
    How do I install the new drive?  Do I have to go into my BIOS and configure something?  Here's what it says about my IDE setup (I don't know what IDE means either.)
    Primary IDE Master = DVD-ROM
    Primary IDE Slave = CD - RW
    Secondary IDE Master = n/a
    Secondary IDE Slave = n/a
    Third IDE Master = Maxtor HDD
    Third IDE Master = n/a
    etc.
    What does Master/Slave mean as far as usage and performance goes?  Which SATA plug should I use for the new drive?
    Sorry for the silly questions, I've never used a machine with more than one hard drive before.
    EDIT:  What brand hard disk do you guys recommend?  I have in mind either Western Digital or Seagate.  I won't have any compatibility or performance issues from using two drives of different make and capacity, will I?
    Here's my specs:
    Intel Pentium 4 2.8e HTT @ 3.26GHz
    Thermaltake Spark 7+ Xaser Edition A1715 CPU Cooler
    MSI 865PE Neo2-PFISR motherboard (BIOS ver. 3.8)
    2x512MB OCZ PC3700 Gold Edition Rev 3 Dual Channel Enhanced Latency DDR @ 466MHz (2-3-3-5)
    Built-by-ATI Radeon 9800 Pro @ XT 128MB DDR 256-bit @ 415/744 (Catalyst 4.12)
    Arctic Cooling VGA Silencer Revision 3
    Creative SoundBlaster Audigy2 ZS Platinum
    Cyber Acoustics CA-4100 4.1 Surround
    Maxtor 6Y120M0 120GB HDD 7200RPM SATA150 8MB cache
    Sony DDU1612 40x/16x DVD-ROM
    Sony CRX230ED 52x/32x CD-RW
    Enermax Noisetaker EG475P 470W PSU(+3.3V = 34A, +5V = 40A, +12V = 33A)
    Ultra Dragon ATX Mid-Tower Case
    Windows XP Pro SP2

    Hi.  I will try to help with some of your questions.  Its easy but time consuming to move/copy files from one hard drive to another.  Just drag the files/folders from one drive to the other one.  That moves them.  To copy them Select them and the select copy then go to the other drive and select paste.  With two hard drives its best to set them up as one for system files and apps (your c drive) and one for storage (your D drive).  Your optical drives then become e and f.  If your case you would leave your current drive as C and the new drive would become your d storage drive.  Moving your mp3s, vids, etc (i.e, non-system files or not apps), could take some hours, but that is usually no problem because you can do small numbers of files at a time or do it overnight.  By the way you never want to fill up your hard drive, especially your c drive.  Always leave 20+ percent free so you can get quick reading/writing to it.  Mp3's, vids, pix etc play just fine from your stoage drive and your games play great from the c drive.  And you can do both at the same time.
    Masters and slaves have the same performance but that only applies to IDE drives.  There is no master/slave designation for SATA drives.
    Backing up your system files can then be done on your storage drive, but as harib said you can back up the important system files to a CD.  Windows provides a backup utility for that.  You can also back them up to your storage drive if you want.
    If you truly want backups of ALL of your files, including storage, is simply a matter of adding another drive and then copying all of the files to the new drive.  Hopefully you would never have both those two drives go bad at the same time.
    Western Digital, Maxtor and Seagate are all good drives.  You first must decide if your new drive will be SATA or IDE.  You might just get another SATA drive for storage, but a lower cost IDE drive of similar capacity for your storage drive likely will be just as fast for for mp3s,etc.  SATA really helps on your system drive which you already have.
    Installation of drives is a bit more complicated with SATA drives in the sytem but can be relatively easy to do once you decide what drive to get.  Don't base your purchase decision on installationo ease.
    When you are about ready to install come back to the forum with specific details of what you want to install and someone will be happy to talk you through the process.
    Good luck!

  • How do I access new second hard drive?

    Hi! I am newbie, I am sorry if this a dumb question...
    How do I access my second hard drive?
    This is what I have:
    SparcStation5 170Mhz, 192MB memory.2HDD (one 4.3GB w/ OS, second Hdd 4.3GB)
    I had my sparc working with Solaris 8 just perfect!
    I added the second hard drive, no problems, I formatted the HDD from withing Solaris OS, (I can probe-scsi from openBoot promt and it showes OK), everything is OK so far, I can see the send hard drive using format, I can partition it and create slices on it, everything seems to be OK, I have no problems making partitions and everything on that Hdd. But when I try 'ls', I can't see anything on that disk, any suggestions? I tried several ways from my manual/book, including mount and it reads 'no acces point on mount' or somthing like that.
    this is what I see from format command:
    disk 0. (seegate 4.3GB.....) this is my new hard drive (already formated and partioned, I created a new partition /usr with 3.75GB on partition 6. Partition 3 is used by the hdd with a totoal of 4GB . this shows as c0t1d0
    disk 1. (SUN4.2GB) this is the hard drive with the OS Solaris 8. this is c0t3d0
    Am I missing something?
    Thanks!
    Murillo

    hi there ...
    read below--
    Find out the address of the drive
    STOP+A
    At the OK prompt, type probe-scsi. This will list all scsi devices on the system. Find the new drive.
    Type boot -r so the OS will see the new drive.
    Login as root and type format. Pick the new drive. The drives are listed as c(controller #)t(scsi id or target #)d(disk #). Label drive is required (it will tell you if the drive is not labeled).
    Next, type partition. Partition the drive as required (always leave partition 2 as the whole drive as it is informational to the OS
    Type print to list the current partitions. When you are done making changes type label
    To return to the OS prompt, type quit twice
    newfs /dev/dsk/DRIVE-ADDRESS
    (ie c0t1d0s0) (controller 0 target(ID) 1 disk 0 slice(partition) 0).
    mkdir directory, where directory is the directory you want to mount the drive on
    (ie, /disk2)
    mount /dev/dsk/DRIVE-ADDRESS directory
    Add the new drive to your /etc/vfstab file.
    (ie. /dev/dsk/c0t1d0s0 /dev/rdsk/c0t1d0s0 /disk2 ufs 1 yes - )

  • Can't get Solaris 8 to show my second hard drive.

    I installed Sol8 on a 1 hard drive intel machine (as the only OS, no windows). Later, I added a second hard drive, and after running the device config assistant (DCA) still doesn't show it in the list of drives under the 'format' command.
    Physically, the new hard drive is using middle IDE plug on my IDE 0, original drive is plugged in on the end of IDE 0. The new hard drive is jumperred to slave, original was orignially set for single, that didn't work so I tried jumperring that one to master, no change in results. On IDE 1 I have a cd-rom on the end plug, originally with no jumper, then added jumper for master (middle plug is empty).
    In the BIOS, the second drive was detected with the right number of heads, cyl, etc. It calls it my D drive.
    I can get to certain screens in DCA to show me the second drive (only in respect to which drive should boot the kernal - I don't want to install the OS on the second drive, I just want it for extra storage).
    Am I missing a step, or am I not installing the hard drive correctly? After DCA and reboot, it still only gives me a choice of my origial drive for 'format', and only shows one drive in the SMC.
    I don't know what is on the new drive (it was pulled from another PC).

    I have the same problem on x86 Solaris 10 that the format command cannot show my second hard drive, the master and slave hard disk are attached through one single cable and Solaris 10 is intalled in the master disk. I tried devfsadm -v but it still doesn't work, do you have any other way to do that? Thank you for any help.

  • Adding and configuring a second hard drive in a Power Mac G4

    I am using a Power Mac G4 with the original 20GB hard drive and running OS 9.2.2.
    I would like to upgrade to 10.4 (Tiger) installing it on a 80 GB Seagate Ultra/ATA 100 which I need to install as a second hard drive.
    This is where my problem arises. From what I have read I cannot install OS 10 on a drive configured as SLAVE. On top of this Apple article ID 106728 has a note not to “change your Apple –installed disc drive to ATA ID-1 (slave) when adding other ATA devices.”
    Is this article correct or am I misunderstanding it? I was hoping I could just install the new drive on top of the original and switch the configurations of the drives making my original drive the SLAVE and the new drive MASTER and just install OS X on the new 80GB drive.
    Or can I put the new drive in the position of my original drive configure it as MASTER and put my original 20GB drive above it and configure it as slave?
    I am hoping someone can let me know if these configurations will work.
    Another question is: If I switch the position of my original drive will I lose access to the data on it?
    I would like to keep the OS systems on separate drives because I need to continue to run my old software and Heidelberg scanner (SCSI, running on LinoColor Elite 5.1 for which updated drivers are not available). This will not be possible in classic. I want OS X on the larger drive as I will be loading updated software eventually and it will become my main OS system.
    Power Mac G4 450GH, 768mb ram (AGP graphics )   Mac OS X (10.4)   Currently running 9.2 and will be upgrading to OS 10.4

    Hi, Thelisa -
    Welcome to Apple's Discussions.
    Is this article correct or am I misunderstanding it?
    Yes, to both - the article is correct, and yes, you seem to be misunderstanding it.
    In the context of the article, "Disc drive" does not mean a hard drive. Earlier in the article it states -
          Solution
          "Disc drive" refers to CD, CD-R, CD-RW, DVD, DVD-RAM, DVD-R, Combo drives, SuperDrives.
    The reason is that on most (if not all) G4s, an optical drive must be jumpered as Master in order for it to be a bootable drive. So, if an optical drive has been jumpered as Slave, it can not then be used to boot from the OSX Install disk.
    You will need to place the drive to be jumpered as Slave in the top position of the bracket (the drive sled), and the one jumpered as Master in the bottom position of the sled.
    The reason for this is the location of the connectors on the IDE ribbon cable (the data cable) - the one jumpered as Master needs to be attached to the end connector of the cable, and the one jumpered as Slave to the middle connector of the cable.
    Because of the physical limits of the cable itself, the one jumpered as Slave must be on top, else the connectors won't reach to the proper drive.
    Which drive is jumpered as which is your choice, but the one jumpered as Slave must be on top.
    If I switch the position of my original drive will I lose access to the data on it?
    No.
    The designation of Master or Slave is, for the most part, simply to allow the Mac to have a unique physical address for each drive, so it can tell one from the other (this is separate from the pathname addressing that the OS uses). Re-jumpering a drive nor changing its physical location will not affect its contents nor their usability.
    One result that may be important sometime is when the machine in question is set up as the Target machine in a firewire Target Disk Mode arrangement - only the drive jumpered as Master will be visible on the Host machine.
    Article #58583 - Firewire Target Disk Mode

  • Question - Need Advice Regarding Second Hard Drive On HP Pavilion dv7t-4100 Notebook PC

    Hi,
    I currently have a HP Pavilion dv7t-4100 Notebook PC, and my hard drive failed (luckily while still under warranty!).  So I contacted HP support and they are in the process of sending me a replacement hard drive, so that I may install it.  When I opened the back of the notebook, I realized that a second hard drive could be installed, if desired.  I would be interested in doing this!  My current primary drive was (and will be again) a Toshiba 1 TB Internal hard drive Serial ATA-300 2.5" 5400 rpm, model MK1059GSM.  I understand (from reading a previous post) that for the second hard drive, I will need to purchase  a "2nd HDD Caddy & Cable for HP dv7-4000, dv7-5000, dv7t SE" (the purchase link the tech in the other post referred to was http://www.newmodeus.com/shop/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=345); and now I need to decide on the size (and other stats) of the hard drive that I will buy to install and used as the secondary drive.  The HP customer service rep I spoke with on the phone about my primary drive replacement said that it is usually recommended to not go any higher (in capacity) than the primary drive, for the second drive, to ensure a more "stable" system (but I am not sure about the level of"technical" knowledge he has about the inner workings of the notebooks).  However, from my upgrading experiences with desktop PCs, I was usually able to go as high in capacity as I could/desired; as long as the physical size of the drive was the same, and it was compatible with my system.  And I usually did choose to go with a larger capacity second drive, as this was where most of my data and media files were stored (with the primary being used for mostly operating system and system files).  This is my first time "upgrading" a Notebook, so I wanted to check with the techs here on the board- would it be a problem for me to go with a secondary drive larger than my primary drive's 1TB capacity?  Also, are there any other factors to consider and keep in mind when selecting a second hard drive?  Any advice and replies will be greatly appreciated.  Thanks so much for your help with this!  -Brian

    You should be able to go as high as 2TB.
    I also own a,(Older), DV7 notebook which has dual drive capability.
    I bought my caddy from the place recommended and got everything needed including screws !
    I matched the capacity in mine with an exact same hard drive and have never had a problem.
    Minor battery life noticable but that was it.
    Your system BIOS is what will hold you back from say a 3TB drive.
    You can go to HP site and check the specs on your model and find out for 100 % sure.
    HP Support & Drivers | United States
    I would recommend doing what I did and match the drive exactly.
    Good day !

  • I had a second hard drive added to my Mac Pro.  How do I format it and not effect my orginal hard drive?

    I had a second hard drive added to my Mac Pro.  How do I format it and not effect my orginal hard drive?

    Just format it with Disk Utility as mentioned above.  Select the new disk on the list at the left.  Click the erase tab.  Specify Mac OS Extended (Journaled) if not already specified and give the disk a name of your choice.  Then click the erase button.
    That's the simplest way to format a disk with a single partition (volum). If you want to create multiple volume (partitions) then click the Partition tab instead of Erase.  You can then use then specify a number of volumes and size each volume by specifying its size or just dragging the slider in the bootm right of each partition.  Give each a name as before and again Mac OS Extended (Journaled).  Click Apply button to create the partitions.
    Since you appear to be new at this just "play" with the erase and partition settings so you can become comfortable with them.  So long as you have the new disk selected on the left you can't really hurt anything since it's a new disk and no data to loose.  You can always go back and erase it back to a single partition.

  • I just purchased the Mac Mini Server with the intention of replacing Lion Server with Lion for the first hard drive while installing Windows 7 thru Bootcamp on the second hard drive. Is it possible for me to do this? Thanks.

    I just purchased the Mac Mini Server with the intention of replacing Lion Server with Lion for the first hard drive while installing Windows 7 thru Bootcamp on the second hard drive. Is it possible for me to do this? Thanks.

    I would use Parallels or VMWare and use the second drive to hold the virtual machine. That way the VM only uses the space that it needs and you can still use the remainder of the drive for other things, not to mention that you would not need to reboot to run windows.
    Also Time Machine does not back up a boot camp partition.

Maybe you are looking for

  • SQL Exception: A lock could not be obtained within the time requested

    Hi Friends, In one of my processes there is an automatic activity which reads some records from an excel sheet and loads them in a separated array of objects and then for each object in the array it creates a copy using Split-N. There are about 2000

  • Can't Import _MG files into Lightroom

    Im running Lightroom 2 and normally import images from my MkII without problems, with the IMG file extension. I used a friends 70D and am trying to import _MG files but the files won't import. Can anyone help as I need the images from this card and n

  • Date validations

    Hi,      Any body tell me what is the function module to validate the date. and is there any function module to check both the dates date1 and date2. Please send me all the function modules regarding all the date validations and to check the dates. V

  • Definition of Sync used by the iPhone

    Hello, I am having a frustrating problem "syncing" my AB contacts. Say I have my iPhone contacts exactly like my AB contacts (because I clicked on "replace contacts on the iPhone"). I then edit or delete something in an existing contact in AB (or del

  • Inprocess Inspection - Missing characteristics

    Hi All, We are using in process inspection ( Inspection type 03 ) .However While  result recording for the inspection lot created I can not see any characteristics in result recording screen. (System message - No characteristics were found ). 1) Insp