Replaced hard drive - computer thinks it's smaller than it is

I just had my hard drive replaced by apple, and though it's supposed to be an 80 gig drive, my computer seems to be under the impression that it is around the range of 8 gigs. What's gone wrong here, and how can I fix it? I can't even re-install tiger because it thinks there's no room on the drive!

I am having the exact same problem with a 60 gig hard drive. I just recieved it from Applecare at about 10:30 this morning. Does anybody know how to fix the problem?

Similar Messages

  • I have a 4th gen 20G ipod whose hard drive has died.  Are replacement hard drives available through the apple store?

    I have a 4th gen 20G ipod whose hard drive has died.  Are replacement hard drives available through the apple store?

    I don't think Apple will do that repair for you, because the iPod is too old.  I believe the hard drive type used in 4th gen and older iPods is no longer produced.  There may be non-Apple shops who can do the repair, but they may be using a working part salvaged from a used iPod.
    If you want to do the repair work yourself, and you are good at such things, this web site has repair guides
    http://www.ifixit.com/Device/iPod_Original
    (There are probably also YouTube videos on the topic.)
    NOTE:  There are two hard drive physical sizes.  The thick version has two platters, and corresponds to the "thick" iPods (with double storage capacity).  A 4th gen 20GB model should be the thin version.  The hard drive used in iPods up to 4th gen should work interchangeably, but 5th gen and later iPods use a different type.
    I have a 4th gen iPod that started out as a 20GB.  The hard drive failed, so I put a compact flash card on an adapter in there.  The adapter is like this one (I bought it a few years ago so it's probably not the same seller)
    http://www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-Compact-Flash-CF-SSD-To-Toshiba-IPod-1-8-inch-Adapte r-Black-/121174875639
    The compact flash card is standard; I bought the cheapest one.  I currently have an 8GB card in there, but prices have come down, so I may get a 64GB card soon.  It works great with the 8GB card.  No more hard drive spin-up delay.  Battery lasts longer.  It's lighter.  And it should be more shock resistant.
    The only mod I needed to make on the adapter was to bend over two pins 90º, where you place a jumper to set the drive to "master."  The adapter plus CF card is actually smaller and thinner than just original 1.8-inch Toshiba hard drive; I used some thin foam packing material (cut to the right shape) to take up the excess space and ensure the adapter and card did not become disconnected.
    The 4th gen iPod has excellent sound, compared to some later iPods.

  • Suggestions on replacement hard drive

    I'm needing a replacement hard drive for a 733MHz 128MB 40G Quicksilver. Anyone with experience on certain brands?
    Thanks,
    Jason

    Jason:
    A 120GB (ATA-100 or ATA-133) drive is perhaps the optimum size... You've confirmed that Mac won't see more than the first 128GB of any drive connected to the native drive bus on the logic board. You may add a drive larger than 120GB to this bus (in case you find a larger drive for less money than a 120GB one), but only the first 128GB will be recognized after formatting. For larger drive internal use at full capacity, you'd need to add a PCI controller card to hook the drive to.
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    As for cloning, I think that the most user-friendly software is SuperDuper, which I'm pretty sure you'll find to be a snap to use. (I'm a long time fan of CarbonCopyCloner, but recently tried SuperDuper to familiarize myself with it and was very impressed by how friendly it is.) It walks you through the volume duplication process in a few easy steps.
    Gary
    1GH DP G4 Quicksilver 2002, 400MH B&W rev.2 G3, Mac SE30   Mac OS X (10.4.2)   5G iPod, Epson 2200 & R300 & LW Select 360 Printers, Epson 3200 Scanner

  • I work for a university and we have a legal apple vendor.Can we re-install macosx for a replacement hard drive for a old macbook?Just one example.

    I work for a university and we have a legal apple vendor who we get to buy all our Apple products from.Can we (university) re-install macosx for a replacement hard drive once the hard drive gets replaced? How can we as the university IT department legally re-install macosx on a imac,macbook, macbookair etc. We would like to load customized macosx imaging software onto the mac machines(imac, macbook, etc ). The university has its own IT workshop and we would like our users to get their laptops back in the shortest turnaround time.

    We're not "Apple Inc." here, just users like you.
    So whatever we say is not an official statement, nor does it in any way, shape, or form represent the official or unofficial policies or opinions of Apple, Inc.
    But I'll offer my quick opinion, having worked in information-systems and technology support in a wide variety of environments over many years.
    Question #1. "NO!"
    No tech support nor repair facility, even if "Apple-authorized", is automatically empowered to install or upgrade OS X on a replacement hard drive just because it is more convenient or time-efficient. When the repair is complete, the student should be expected to (re)install the operating system themself*!
    Nurturing students (and occasionally dragging them, screaming and kicking!) as budding computer-, tablet-, smartphone-users to become digitally self-sufficient is a worthy goal that any institution of higher education must pursue.
    Making students totally dependent upon "Mother Support" for every little thing about their personal digital devices is a grave disservice to both the students and the people who provide the support. Support-mothered students do become life-long digital dependents, instead of taking the required time to learn enough about the care and feeding of their digital "pets" to sustain them. Entreprenurial students may choose to become 'experts' and actually help each other with their devices, and even make money doing it. Some students may even be inspired/coerced to pursue a career in tech support!!!
    *By all means, if the student requests additional help (re-installing the OS), then the University should charge the student a fair price for the service, provided that the user provides the OS on original or upgrade media, or in the case of the 'digital download' upgrades (for OS X 10.7 and 10.8) provides proof of purchase for the OS upgrade, or the original purchase receipt or other recognized documentation for the purchase of the computer showing the version of OS installed when purchased. Students need to learn about personal responsibility, economics ("What is MY time really worth"?), and proper record-keeping too!
    Question #2. Regarding the customized imaging software, provide it on media or a link for students to download and install it. Make it their responsibility!
    Message was edited by: kostby

  • G62-234DX replaced hard drive with new Samsung 250 GB. Same size as installed.

    G62-234DX  Hard drive dead.  I replaced hard drive with new Samsung 250 GB. SATA II hard drive and used the recovery Windows 7 Home edition DVD.  Error message appeared after windows loads files and starts windows from the recovery DVD.  An error dialog box opens after completing and indicates, This computer is not supported by the recovery discs.  You will not be able to continue to recover this system with these discs.  error: 0100-1425 -3627-3628-3623-3624.   Hit OK and system powers down. 

    Hi:
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    "CyberLink Recovery Discs utility resolves an issue where Recovery Discs sent from HP do not work on a new hard drive."
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  • Replacing hard drive & using recovery discs made by myself.

    HPdv6 2119tx laptop. After replacing hard drive and loading recovery discs (that I made) successfuly, on reboot it messages something about cannot locate disk or load bootable disk (sorry, cannot remember exact wording but back to the start). Could this be because I replaced a 650gb drive with a 500gb drive. 
    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    Hi:
    Normally you cannot use recovery disks on a smaller hard drive.
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  • Replacing hard drive in PowerBooks

    Is it difficult or advisable to replace the hard drive in my PowerBook myself? Or do I need to bring it into a shop?
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    Replacing the hard drive is certainly do-able, but you should be comfortable with the Powerbook innards. Here's directions that you can look over, to make the do-it-yourself or have-someone-else-do-it-for-you decision: http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Mac/PowerBook-G4-Al-17-Inch/HD-Replacement/55/6/
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  • Need help with replacement hard drive

    My hard drive has stopped working on this computer and since i only purchased it on 10/2012 I really don't want to replace it just yet.  I am trying to buy a new hard drive but I would like a Seagate.  I want to upgrade from  1 TB to 2TB.  I was wondering if there is a Seagate product out there that would be compatable with the original hard drive but in 2 TB.The original hard drive is a HDD GNRC 1 TB SATA 3 ECO 7200 rpm 3.5".  I was looking at a Seagate 2TB SATA 6.0 but I do not know is the SATA 6 will work with the original SATA 3.  Can you please help me or guide me in the right direction for a replacement.  I also have the HP recovery CD's coming to me in the mail.Thanks,GinaCee 

    Hi Big_Dave,Thank you for your help.  I found this hard drive at Newegg and I was hoping you could tell me if it would be compatable.Seagate Barracuda ST2000DM001 2TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive Bare Drive.   Or is there any Seagate product you could reccomend? I have a Seagate external hard drive and I like thier product, so I was hoping that they made something compatable for my HP.  I will be installing this drive myself.  I have all the instructions from the HP website and it doesn't look that difficult.  Just waiting for my restore CD's and a replacement hard drive so I can start this project.   Thanks again!Gina 

  • Replaced hard drive now what help

    I =have the crt imac snow edition, I replaced hard drive all I get is a blue globe on start up, I have the software restore disc have placed it in nothing happens tried the holding down c key to start from the cd, Nothinh happens I have read numerous threads hoping to find the answer.

    First of all, are you sure the CD you inserted is truely bootable and designed for your iMac (and not specific to another different Mac)?
    Anyways to reset PRAM, while turning on your iMac, hold down Option + Cmd + P + R (I know, hard to do that 4 key combo).. and you should hear some "boing" sound, wait until you hear two "boings" then you can release and try to hold down 'C' again to boot your CD... I think that's how that works... someone can correct me or clarify if I'm not 100% correct....
    ANdrew

  • Replaced hard drive- will not reboot

    Replaced hard drive on hp compaq mini cq10- 120ca because it quit working and the diagnostics said the hard drive was no good. Had a back up flash drive, but when I tried to reboot it says the bootmgr is missing. The mini did not come with any back up cd. What can I do to remedy this, and how can I verify the flash drive  is bootable. When I connect the flash drive to another computer it looks like all of the backup files are there. It had windows xp home on it.  Thank you.

    Hi Tomilly,
    The easiest way is to get a recovery image from HP, please call HP call center and request a recovery image either via USB drive or CD type depends on your configuration.
    If your original HDD is still workable, please re-install this HDD back.  Boot up the system and locate the HP recovery manager, there shall be an option to create recovery media which can store all your image including the OS to the media.
    Best rgds,
    Kick_OK
    I work for HP.

  • Replaced hard drive and iTunes does not recognize my laptop

    My 2011 MacBook Pro froze up and when I rebooted the folder error came up.  Replaced hard drive with a SSD drive and my new OS has a new name.  When I logged into ITunes I had to delete an account due to my limit being reached.  My old Mac ID was showing and it was signed up for the cloud at a fee of $24.00.  The same MacBook but with a new hard drive had a new ID and I can not restore any of my pics or ITunes music.  Am I missing a step or can I rename my Mac so it will match my old ID?  If I rename it can I download my old info off of ITunes?? Thanks

    I'm not following much of the question and for me it would help to get some terms straight. You only "log into" the iTunes Store (online).  What account was this and what limit??
    Old Mac ID?  Your AppleID is what you use to log into the store. It does not change with computers.  You always use the same one, perhaps updating the email address from time to time.
    By the cloud do you mean iTunes Match?
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  • Ibook not booting, replacing hard drive doesn't help

    This one's got me stymied. It's my sister's computer (ibook g4 14" 933mhz 150gb hard drive, 640mb ram). Here are the symptoms:
    1. Starts up past the apple gray screen to a blue screen.
    2. Won't start up from CD either (except hardware test CD)
    3. Started in verbose mode, it comes up with a couple of errors (one about applers232 something or other and the other about applepmuuser). If they would be helpful, I can reboot a couple of times to get them better (it boots past the verbose stuff to a bluescreen).
    Fixes attempted:
    1. Replaced hard drive (reinstalled os x 10.3 via target disk mode from another ibook g4)
    2. Ran Hardware test, no problems detected
    3. Booted into single user mode, fsck checks out fine (several times)
    4. Ran disk utility (via target disk mode) and it comes up clean (not surprisingly)
    5. Reset pram
    6. Reset nvram

    Are you able to boot the iBook with the other Mac utilizing TDM?
    If you've not tried that, then that would be my next step. Set up the other Mac for TDM then plug it into the iBook, boot the iBook while holding the option key until you get to the startup mangaer, select the TDM Mac-drive and continue. This will help you determine if the logicboard is shot. If it runs ok with the other Mac in TDM then it most likely is not the logic board, unless its the IDE controller on the board.

  • IPod 4th Gen Click Wheel replaced hard drive; problems

    Ok, So I replaced the 20gb hard drive with a new EXACT replacement hard drive, no other problems with iPod. But iTunes will not recognize it because the hard drive is not formatted. I tried formating it with Disk Utility but keep getting error messages. Im not sure what format to use. When the 4th gen came out Intel processors werent here so Im sure I need to simply format as Mac OS Extended. There is no HFS= format in Disk Utility. Im lost as to what to do. Please help??!

    hmm - curiouser and curiouser
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  • MacBook Pro does not boot past apple screen after replacing hard drive

    After replacing hard drive on MacBook Pro 13 inch early 2011 model, the screen only boots to the apple logo.  Do I need to re-install the OS?

    The problem is that the OS is not in any where else of the MacBook Pro than in the HD / SSD. If you replace the Hard Drive, then you will need to Re-install OSX into that hard drive, it's pretty easy.
    1) Power up your Macbook Pro, as fast as you can press and hold the Option key (ALT). You'll see that it opens the bootable-devices you have, you'll see a Recovery partition, click it.
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    2) In the menu select Disk Utility.
    3) In Disk Utility go ahead and select the Hard Drive that is inside the MBP.
    4) Erase the content.
    (If the Hard Drive contains no data continue with the following jumping the last 3 steps).
    5) Select Re-install OSX.
    6) Select the Hard Drive in which you want to install it.
    Follow the steps of everything else (it should take approximately 1 hour to do the whole thing).
    Hope this helps!
    Later.

  • I have two hard drives on my mac 10.5.8 power pc and hear the clickking sounds of the first hard drive and think that it may be dying, can I install everything on the other hard drive also and wait for the first drvie to die before i use the other drives

    I have two hard drives on my mac 10.5.8 power pc and hear the clickking sounds of the first hard drive and think that it may be dying, can I install everything on the other hard drive also and wait for the first drive to die before i use the other drives? Or, what is the best way to handle this?

    I do not know what you are waiting for.
    I'd make a backup of your important stuff before cloning the entire disk.
    Carbon Copy Cloner will copy your startup drive to an external  firewire drive.  You can boot from the external drive to verify that you have a good clone. When you upgrade your existing startup drive, you can at any time boot from your external drive and go back to your existing system.
    http://www.bombich.com/software/ccc.html
    SuperDuper is the wildly acclaimed program that makes recovery painless, because it makes creating a fully bootable backup painless. Its incredibly clear, friendly interface is understandable, easy to use, and SuperDuper's built-in scheduler makes it trivial to back up automatically. And it runs beautifully on both Intel and Power PC Macs!

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