Replacing optical drive ?

is there any problems replacing optical drive [Superdrive] with a secondry HDD using a caddy

It will void your warranty. Otherwise it can be a plus.
OWC   http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/drive_bracket/datadoubler/

Similar Messages

  • Late 2005 2.3. Replacement optical drive?

    My G5 is coming up on 3 years old and I have started to look at new hard drives and optical drives just in case either of mine start going bad.
    Anyway, I was at the Apple store today, and one of the genies told me my only option for a replacement optical drive was an external through Apple?
    From searching online, all the direct replacement internal optical drives are no longer manufactured. What are you guys replacing your optical drives with as far as internal ones?
    The genie told me the drive has to be matched with the motherboard?
    Thanks for any advice.

    Hi-
    What a bunch if mis-information.....
    Popular drives such as these drives will work fine in the G5. The DVR-115 from Pioneer is readily supported in OS X, and the soon to appear on the North American market, Pioneer DVR-116 would also be a good choice.
    Further confirmation of what others are using can be found by using the Xlr8yourMac Drive Data base. Enter "optical drive" and "G5" in the fields and search.
    Same with hard drives, Hitachi and Western Digital provide excellent drives, with excellent compatibility in the G5.

  • Replaced optical drive now locked out of hard drive hdd start up drive will mount

    replaced optical drive now locked out of hd start up drive will not mount can some one help me

    I didn't ask you if you thought you ordered the correct optical drive...
    You opened up the machine. You made a change. Now it doesn't work. Reverse what you did and see if it works again.  I'm assuming that the machine actually worked before you did this, right?

  • What type of interface for replacement optical drive?

    I have a white, NOT unibody Macbook, model MacBook5,2.
    The optical drive is broken, and it's out of warranty.
    Happily, I'm not squeamish about swapping it out myself. However, I'm finding conflicting info online about what kind of drive I actually need. I would just do a like-for-like replacement, but the Matshita UJ-867A comes in PATA and SATA flavors. System Profiler says the drive is connected to the SATA bus, but discussions of the older Macbooks (MacBook1-4,1) are unambiguous about the drive being PATA.
    Moreover, several parts retailers list a SATA->PATA converter as an optical drive accessory.
    So before I rip the sucker open to see what kind of optical drive I need, can anybody with some Apple Repair experience tell me for sure?
    Thanks in advance.

    SATA

  • Replacement optical drive for '07 20" iMac.

    Have a 2007 20" iMac, that was refurbed in 2008, who's optical drive(DVR-K06PD) was making horrible noises. As there seems to be a rather high failure rate with these, thought I'd replace it with something else.
    Picked up a Sony AD-7630A after reading that people had success with it. Worked OK...except it wouldn't eject media consistently. Then tried a UJ85C that was available. It worked fine until you put the bezel back on the computer. Then it wouldn't load media unless you pushed it in with something. Even a swift shove wouldn't get it completely past the slot protector.
    After a bit of poking around, it seems that only the K06 will work in these iMacs. I did find a repair site that mentioned a UJ-875, but that was the only other one. Hoping someone might know of good replacements. There is not a lot of info out there. Puzzling, as they've been around for a couple of years. Lots of references to the white versions.
    Thanks
    PS - In researching this, I did come across a blurb from the Apple KB that recommended that these drives only be used in a horizontal position!.

    The www.ifixit.com website says that your iMac needs this replacement drive; 12.7 mm PATA 8x Pioneer SuperDrive They list this part number, but I cannot tell if that is Pioneer's number or their in-house number; IF167-005-1. They say that your iMac has different mounting slots and requires this drive to correctly attach to the optical drive bracket.
    Dah•veed

  • Replacement optical drive for early 2008 MacBook

    I own an early 2008 2.4 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo 13" MacBook that appears to have developed a fault with the MATSHITA DVD-R UJ-857E optical drive.
    Unfortunately I am unable to get the optical drive replaced by Apple, as it seems they don't keep the parts for any machine over five years old. So I plan to replace the faulty unit myself. Can anyone recommend a replacement? The UJ-857E model doesn't appear to be available anywhere other than in the United states and then only as a refurbished unit and listed as an 857C which I assume to be from an earlier model.
    I was wondering if there might be a more recent equivalent available that I might use instead. There seem to be several UJ-898 models for late 2008 MacBooks available, but I have no idea how much of a change Apple made to the internal configuration from early to late 2008.
    Does anyone have any experience of replacing or upgrading their optical drive that they would be willing to share? I plan to follow the IFixit tutorials for the procedure. I just need to know what unit to buy as a replacement.

    I would stick to what OWC (macsales) offers.
    http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/superdrive/MacBook_13

  • Replacement optical drive for late 2009 Mini

    I recently purchased a used late 2009 Mac Mini that works great except the optical drive does not read any CD's/ DVD's I have fed into it. I hooked up an external USB drive which reads hem fine, but is not bootable, in case I ever need to reinstall my OS.
    Can anyone provide a model # of a reasonability priced internal slot load CD/ DVD reader- writer that is also Mac bootable?

    There should be a compatible replacement superdrive-like optical drive
    among those listed for Apple Mac Mini from OWC macsales site online.
    They also appear to have several other upgrade & replacement parts...
    An instruction video (free) can be seen on the bottom of their pages
    on how to install optical and hard drives. Or use online iFixit guides.
    About USB flash or externalHDD, be sure the HDD or SSD is formatted
    to use with GUID and HFS+ Journaled; there may be other details that
    need to be readfor these to work. External USB optical drives can be
    used with bootable system discs, be sure to check retail seller returns
    policy when you get some brand such as LG or other, so you may return
    the unit should it not work out for your purposes. Some won't boot OS X.
    Good luck & happy computing!

  • Replacement Optical Drive Issues

    A friend of mine had a label detach and disintegrate inside her DVD drive. I took it apart and cleaned all the bits and pieces out as best I could. When I put everything back together System Profiler couldn't detect a burning device. The drive seemed to be semi-functional because it sucked in a disk and made noises. Unfortunately, I could not eject the disk and found that I had to disassemble the iMac and drive again to get the disk out. I thought that perhaps the exploding label had somehow damaged the drive to the point the iMac couldn't recognize it so I found what I thought was a replacement on eBay. The iMac had a DVR-K05PA model installed but the eBay unit that showed up was a DVR-K05 (no PA suffix). I installed it anyway but I get the same result: System Profiler says no burning device was detected. The drive was advertised as fully functional but is it the wrong model number? Is the motherboard on this machine faulty or where else could the problem be? The machine works fine except for no DVD drive.

    Hi Larry
    What iMac, what OS X is it on, what Optical Drive came out, what Firmware Revision is listed in the System Profiler, is it the 17" Early 2006 4,1 listed in your Profile or some other iMac year/model....????
    Start off reseting the SMC > http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3964
    +1. Shut down the computer.+
    +2. Unplug the computer's power cord.+
    +3. Press and hold the power button for 5 seconds.+
    +4. Release the power button.+
    +5. Attach the computers power cable.+
    +6. Press the power button to turn on the computer.+
    and restart resetting the PRAM > http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1379
    +1. Shut down the computer.+
    +2. Locate the following keys on the keyboard: Command, Option, P, and R. You will need to hold these keys down simultaneously in step 4.+
    +3. Turn on the computer.+
    +4. Press and hold the Command-Option-P-R keys. You must press this key combination before the gray screen appears.+
    +5. Hold the keys down until the computer restarts and you hear the startup sound for the second time.+
    +6. Release the keys.+
    Dennis
    Message was edited by: den.thed
    Woops' that's why they call me "day late and dollar short" I never say your second post.....

  • 2nd HDD to replace optical drive - B560

    I have seen a thread here (http://forums.lenovo.com/t5/W-Series-ThinkPad-Laptops/2nd-hard-drive-in-a-W510/m-p/346539#M12570) of success replacing the optical drive with a 2nd HDD bay in a y560. I am wrong thinking there is not much difference between a Y560 and a B560, at least concerning the basic chasis and components layout, and a similar HDD bay should work in a B560. Has anyone with a B560 added a 2nd HDD? Many thanks.
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    Well, the B560 would work fine IMO. I have done it on my Y550. What you want to make sure is that your optical drive is not some kind of weird micro drive. Honestly, it's probably a standard sized DVD drive, to which any adapter would work. I picked up mine on eBay for about $20.
    I'm not sure what else to say... It's really easy to do.
    ←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗
    Tap that kudos button if I helped ^^
    ←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗←↑→↓↘↙↖↗

  • Replacing optical drive with a hard drive in a MBP

    Hello... Just ordered a new 15" MBP 2.2GHz with the 128GB SSD to replace my 13" MBP. I was thinking about just using a cheap external HD until one that can take advantage of the Thunderbolt port comes out and then I heard about the MCE OptiBay Hard Drive kit. If you haven't heard about it, the kit is basically a bracket that allows you to mount a HD where the optical drive is installed. You can then install the optical drive in an external enclosure and connect via USB on an as needed basis.
    Has anyone had any experience with this? And, more importantly, does it void the Apple warranty? If it's allowable, any reco's on an internal drive?
    If installing does void the warranty, any suggestions on a reliable (but inexpensive) external drive? Been trying to find one that utilizes the Firewire 800 port but not a whole lot to choose from... will FW800 make enough of a difference to justify the extra cost?
    Thanks, Kevin

    Hello again!
    Will boot natively into Win from time to time but noticed you used Parallels and were able to access the Win 7 VM very quickly! Must say I was pretty excited to see that (as it is painfully slow on my current MBP). You're running 8GB of RAM, correct?
    Plan on using Win VM often and primarily because of one program... MS OneNote. Use it often and am annoyed that it is not available in Office for the Mac!
    Re Audi... Have you heard about or seen spy photos of the new RS4 Avante? Gorgeous car but it will never come to the US. You guys get all the nice cars. BTW, did Euro delivery on my 540 and can't bare to part with it as I still have less than 100k miles on it... Well and then I'd have to change my email alias. Though pkh-m5 has a nice ring to it!
    Cheers, Kevin

  • 2nd caddy replacing optical drive help

    hi guys
    i would like to know which type of caddy drive can be use to replace the optical disk in my macbook 5.1 aluminium unibody late 2008?
    whats the connection type? sata?
    how thick is the optical drive? 9.5mm? 12.7mm?
    thanks in advance
    erwin

    You can probably just tape it down with package sealing tape. I would just re-use the old stuff. On my recent upgrade, my tape just barely had enough sticky left.
    Edit:
    Here is a source I found:
    http://www.stewmac.com/shop/Electronics,pickups/Supplies:_Shielding/Conductive_CopperTape.html
    Pretty cheap, too.
    Message was edited by: Keith Barkley

  • 2nd HDD caddy replacing optical drive for HP Pavilion 15-e073ca Notebook PC & Windows 10

    Hello ! I am planning to add a SSD to my two-years-old HP Pavilion 15-e073ca Notebook PC. I found on some sites that I can remove the optical drive and put a second drive using a caddy adapter into the optical drive bay. I found that some people on the forum have done it successfully, but nothing about my PC model. I want to know if it could work with my product. In other words, there is my plan:1-Remove the actual HDD from the hard drive bay and replace it with the new SSD.2-Remove the optical drive and replace it with the caddy adapter containing my old HDD.3-Do a clean install of Windows 10 on the SSD, using a USB recovery flash drive made with my actual Windows 10 system (which was updated from Windows 8.1). I am planning to buy the following parts:1- a HDD / SSD caddy adapter for HP Pavilion 15 (model OBHD9-SATA-SATA-BU9), from NewmodeUS (http://www.newmodeus.com/shop/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=2_5&products_id=583)2- a 128 GB SSD drive (item SDSSDHP-128G), from SanDisk (http://www.sandisk.com/products/ssd/sata/ultra-plus/?capacity=128gb) I have some questions before buying the parts:1- Will the two drives (my old HDD and the new SSD) be recognized by the motherboard / BIOS and the operating system (Windows 10)? Is there a limit of one unique HDD/SSD drive on the computer?2- The height of the SSD is 7mm, and it seems that my old HDD is 9.5mm height (model WDC WD10JPVT-60A1YT0). Would it cause any problem (would I need to add spacers)?3- Do these parts work together and with my computer (size, compatibility)? Do you expect any problem with this upgrade?4- Will the clean install of Windows 10 work, since I plan to install it on a different drive than the one I used to create the USB recovery flash drive? I have never done a clean Windows installation before. Thanks in advance for your replies.Haghe

    Hi:
    Use the W7 32 bit drivers and software from the Probook 450 G2 except the graphics, firmware and BIOS files.
    http://h20564.www2.hp.com/hpsc/swd/public/readIndex?sp4ts.oid=6943827&swLangOid=8&swEnvOid=4053
    Graphics:
    First install the Intel chipset installation utility from the above model and reboot.
    Second, install the Intel HD graphics driver and reboot.
    https://downloadcenter.intel.com/Detail_Desc.aspx?DwnldID=24246
    Then install the nVidia graphics driver and reboot.
    http://www.nvidia.com/download/driverResults.aspx/79892/en-us

  • I replaced optical drive, now MacBookPro is very hot and wifi hardware not installed

    My late 2008 MacBookPro 5,1 2.53 GHz laptop's optical drive would not record last week. A lens cleaning didn't help, so I replaced the optical drive Tuesday evening with iFixit instructions. Other than stripping one of the screws holding the drive in place, all seemed pretty straightforward. I had to disconnect the camera cable to get the drive out but replaced it. After putting everything back together, the new drive seemed to burn discs well and everything (including the camera) worked perfectly.
    Last night I came home to the laptop, which, as usual, was sleeping and connected to the AC adapter. Not as usual, it was really hot. I restarted it and when it rebooted the wifi icon had an x in it and said wifi:hardware not installed.
    I reset the PRAM and the SMC. No luck.
    I have an appointment to take it to a genius bar tomorrow afternoon, but what could I have done without realizing it?
    Thanks for any suggestions (I have been working on Mac desktops and laptops for a number of years...this is the first time anything like this has happened to me...)

    That is true.  I cannot think of any way to test the Optical Drive without swapping it into a known correctly operating MBP.
    A thought which probably may not be an issue.  When I installed an Optical Drive in my old (2006) MBP, I remember seeing in the instruction manual an item called a grounding pad (which looked like a tiny steel brillo pad with out soap) which was missing in mine.  The MBP worked and I essentially ignored it.  Perhaps that may not be case with your situation.
    My thoughts are that the Optical Drive is malfunctioning and the cause of your problem.  Perhaps you should consider getting a new replacement from OWC.  But that entails a $100 risk with no guarantees of success.
    Ciao.

  • Replaced Optical Drive now Mac book will not boot up

    I bought a second hand Mac Book Pro A1150 model.  It did not have an optical drive so I bought one, installed it and now my Mac Book will not boot up.  When I take the drive out the Mac Book boots up fine.  I was told that the optical drive although used was tested and work when it was shipped out.  I'm a little new to Macs but not new to working on computers.  Is it common for a possible defective optical drive to casue a Mac Book pr to not boot up or does this sound like an issue with the optical drive cable, or possibly the logic board?

    That is true.  I cannot think of any way to test the Optical Drive without swapping it into a known correctly operating MBP.
    A thought which probably may not be an issue.  When I installed an Optical Drive in my old (2006) MBP, I remember seeing in the instruction manual an item called a grounding pad (which looked like a tiny steel brillo pad with out soap) which was missing in mine.  The MBP worked and I essentially ignored it.  Perhaps that may not be case with your situation.
    My thoughts are that the Optical Drive is malfunctioning and the cause of your problem.  Perhaps you should consider getting a new replacement from OWC.  But that entails a $100 risk with no guarantees of success.
    Ciao.

  • Replacing optical drive with SSD and HD with new HD

    Hi folks, recently my macbook pro unibody's  (2011) hard drive started encountering some fatal errors.  I've gone through all possible fixes, and it looks like the only option left is to replace the HDD.  As much as this initially bummed me out, I'm a little excited about the prospect now.  I think I would like to go ahead and replace the optical drive with a SSD while I have the computer open to replace the HDD.  This will breathe some serious new life into my macbook pro. 
    My question is, which SSD's and HDD's are compatible with the macbook and which brands do you guys (the community) recommend?  Should I upgrade my ram while I'm in there? How difficult of a job is this?  I am mechanically inclined but I have much more experience working on tractors than electronics.  Thanks for any advice or input you can offer!

    Go to OWC to get the Data Doubler bracket for your model. You can also find HDDs and SSDs there. Be sure to put the SSD where the HDD is located and put the HDD in the optical drive bay. Upgrading RAM is always a good idea. I've done all these in my 2011 MBP. OWC also provides tools needed and online video tutorials.
    For optimum use of this combo only install OS X on the SSD. Install everything else on the HDD. Then follow these instructions for setting it up to have the computer boot from the SSD but use your Home folder that is on the HDD:
    How to use an SSD with your HDD
    If you are going to use an SSD as a boot drive together with your existing HDD as the "data" drive, here's what you can do.
    After installing the SSD you will need to partition and format the SSD using Disk Utility. Then, install OS X on the SSD. After OS X has been installed boot from the SSD. Use Startup Disk preferences to set the SSD as the startup volume.
    Open Users & Groups preferences. Click on the lock icon and authenticate. CTRL- or RIGHT-click on your user account listing in the sidebar and select Advanced Options from the context menu. You will see a field labeled "Home dir:" At the right end you will see a Change button. Click on it. In the file dialog locate the Home folder now located on the HDD (HDD/Users/account_name/.) Select the folder, click on Open button. Restart the computer as directed.
    When the computer boots up it will now be using the Home folder located on the HDD.
    Another more technical method involving the Terminal and aliases is discussed in depth here: Using OS X with an SSD plus HDD setup - Matt Gemmell. This is my preferred approach because I can select which of the Home's folders I want on the HDD and which I don't want. For example, I like to keep the Documents and Library folders on the SSD because I access their content frequently.
    Be sure you retain the fully bootable system on your HDD in case you ever need it.
    Be sure to use Trim Enabler 3.3 to activate TRIM on the SSD.

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