Solid State Hard Drive Upgrade - Anyone?

Has anyone upgraded their original MacBook Pro to a Solid State Hard Drive? If so, how time consuming was it and what equipment did you use?
Thanks!

Hi Robert
I was able to find the Video for you please find the link given below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4n78ipOeLs
Let us know how it goes!
"I work for HP."
****Click the (purple thumbs up icon in the lower right corner of a post) to say thanks****
****Please mark Accept As Solution if it solves your problem****
Regards
Manjunath

Similar Messages

  • Envy 2x solid state hard drive upgrade

    Is it possible to replace the 64gig drive with a larger capacity drive?  If yes which mfg and models will fit physically?
    thank you.

    Hi Robert
    I was able to find the Video for you please find the link given below.
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4n78ipOeLs
    Let us know how it goes!
    "I work for HP."
    ****Click the (purple thumbs up icon in the lower right corner of a post) to say thanks****
    ****Please mark Accept As Solution if it solves your problem****
    Regards
    Manjunath

  • Will my Pavilion dv5224nr notebook support a solid state hard drive?

    I am currently running Microsoft Windows XP Media Center Edition Version 2005 (Reporting Version 2002); I have 1 GB RAM installed on my Pavilion dv5000; Model dv5224nr.
    I am considering the followin upgrades to my system:
    I would like to install a 120 GB Solid State Hard Drive,
    Upgrade my Memory to 4 GB
    Upgrade my Operating System to Vista Ultimate, 64-bit
    Will my system support these upgrades?
    Dave 

    Your laptop will only support a SSD drive through a 1.8" or 2.5" USB external hard drive enclosure. You cannot put one inside the laptop itself so your setup would be intresting if planning on putting a OS on a SSD. They are great for extra storage and you could still run windows off of a external but I do not suggest it as it's not worth the problems windows will most likely give you.
    First thing is to get that 1GB upgraded to at least 4GB for any version of windows - these days all apps are memory hogs and 1GB is making your machine push it's limits while not being fast or burning hot. Vista is a good choice for OS and I wouldn't attempt Windows 7 on the dv5000 series due to the specs.
    Hope this helps, good luck...
    Justin
    Take care,
    Laptop
    Motherboard Guide

  • Installed a cloned a 500g solid state hard drive but unable to boot. Can only hear drive spinning quietly, no chime to launch OS. Total darkness. Can anyone help? thanks in advance!

    Installed a cloned 500g solid state hard drive but unable to boot in macbook pro. Can only hear drive spinning quietly, no chime to launch OS. Total darkness. Can anyone help? thanks in advance!

    Hi Retired Engineer,
    Yes, you're right. It is the Seagate Momentus XT and it does not spin. That was just a layman's term for computer illiterate like myself. After hours of inspection & a prayer, I discovered by pulling the 4 GB memory chips out I put in, replacing the 1.5 GB back in for the memory which I upgraded 3 years ago. Chime! It works! So it is the 4 GB memory causing the problem. But why? Does that mean my Macbook Pro does not support with more memory? The fan noise is now gone which I suspect it was caused the other overheating Seagate hard drive & eventually causing the crash. However, the top bar temp indicator shows 174˙F @ 000rpm. Does that also mean the fan on the left is not working? (the right fan on the board works). Do they work simutaneously? Or left fan is just a back up?
    Thanks for your reply & kind gesture.

  • Recounting My Successful Experience Upgrading My Solid State Hard Drive

    I just successfully upgraded my solid state hard drive from
    60 gigabytes to 256 ; the machine is a Lenovo T400s - while the upgrade is
    still fairly fresh, I thought I’d share my experience – maybe someone else will
    benefit – most of what I’m about to relay was provided by Zoltanthegypsy and
    GMAC-R60 – I thank them again for their advice - but I will try to add some
    additional thoughts based on my experience – for the most part I was able to
    use the tools provided by Lenovo – my original hard drive had 3 partitions, S
    (system), C ( windows + my programs & data), & Q ( Lenovo stuff like
    backup and restore, the factory copy, etc.) :
    Create a “factory state” copy of the machine to
    DVD or CD soon after purchase – I say soon after purchase because it appears that
    a minimum amount of hard disk space is required – my 60 gig was almost full and
    I got a message that there wasn’t enough space – I can still make the copy but
    I’ll have to move some things off temporarily – this step isn’t really related
    to the upgrade but it is a good idea –  Start/Lenovo ThinkVantage Tools and you’ll see
    the option – and as Zoltanthegypsy has pointed out you will most likely not be
    able to do this from the new hard drive after the restore operation covered
    below – I haven’t proven this out but I do know that my Q space on the new
    drive is smaller than before – something was lost and it’s most likely the
    factory state – and so keep the old hard drive long enough to make that factory
    state copy to DVD or CD.
    The next step was a full backup to a Lenovo
    external hard drive – it came with one partition - the external that I got from
    Lenovo has a small keypad and is password enabled – this fact will come into
    play further on – as GMAC-R60 noted a pop-up will appear giving the option to
    create rescue media – you want to select this option so that the external will be
    bootable.
    When the backup is complete you want to swap hard
    drives making sure to first unplug & remove the battery .
    There may be other ways to do this next step but
    here’s what I did – I powered on the machine and let it go through what
    appeared to be a BIOS routine – note that my external was attached to the
    laptop but it wasn’t activated by keying in the password – after the BIOS
    routine was finished I activated the external by typing in the password and then
    did a Control/Alt/Delete – the machine restarted and booted from the external –
    with hindsight I probably could have connected & activated the external
    before powering on but the instructions that came with the external suggested
    something different which didn’t work for me .
    I was now able to go into rescue and recovery
    and do a complete restore to the new drive – but to my surprise the extra space
    that I bought with the new drive ended up all in the Q partition – and Windows
    Disk Management didn’t enable me to reallocate the space to C.
    And so I purchased Disk Director 11 Home by
    Acronis – a $50.00 investment in a tool that I’ll probably never use again but
    I’m now able to use an $800 solid state drive rather than trying to recoup some
    money via Ebay -– within minutes I was able to reclaim the space and I now have
    enough C space to last the lifetime of the laptop – especially since all
    pictures go on a stick & my demographic isn’t into video games .
    One useful piece of information that I got from
    a user on the Acronis forum was that all of the Lenovo tools like rescue and
    recovery, etc. are available for download from the Lenovo website – and so if worse
    came to worse I could have deleted that Q partition, stretched C using Windows
    Disk Management , and then downloaded the Lenovo tools into C.
    One thing I’d like to learn to do would be to
    perform all the steps outlined above but without using the Lenovo tools – using
    Windows 7 tools instead but not having a Windows CD , i.e. how do you boot

    It went something like this:
    (On the stock drive)
    Plugged in a blank USB HDD, and a blank USB flash drive.
    - HDD formatted in NTFS, flash drive in FAT16.
    Ran the recovery media creator.
    - Created bootable media on flash drive, and put the recovery image on the HDD.
    Once done, shutdown, removed the battery, swapped the drive for a 500GB Scorpio Black (freshly NTFS quick-formatted). USB HDD and flash drive were still attached.
    Booted, and used F12 to select the flash drive for booting.
    It booted into the Windows Recovery Environment and I chose the Lenovo restore factory image option at the bottom of the list.
    From there on out, I just clicked through the wizard, and it restored.
    Upon finishing, I unplugged all of the external media, and had it restart. It then booted into OOBE as expected.
    W520: i7-2720QM, Q2000M at 1080/688/1376, 21GB RAM, 500GB + 750GB HDD, FHD screen
    X61T: L7500, 3GB RAM, 500GB HDD, XGA screen, Ultrabase
    Y3P: 5Y70, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD, QHD+ screen

  • Solid State Hard Drive for HP Pavilion Elite m9040n

    I seriously considering replacing my "C" drive with a SSD.  I've upgraded to 8 G memory, replaced the video card to a Galaxy GT 610.  I'm still running MS Vista Home Premium.  i'm looking to upgrade to MS 8.1 and office 365.  I want a faster boot time and current OS.  I DONOT play "Games".
    Can anyone recommend a Solid State Hard Drive? 
    Thank You
    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    I am partial to Samsung SSD's.  I have installed one in my HP 810-135qe.  Here is an EVO 840 - 250 GB:
    http://www.samsung.com/us/computer/memory-storage/MZ-7TE250BW
    You can use Samsung's Data Migration tool to clone your HDD to the SSD.
    You can contact Samsung's Customer Support to  make certain that it will work in your computer.
    Please click the "Thumbs up + button" if I have helped you and click "Accept as Solution" if your problem is solved.
    Signature:
    HP TouchPad - 1.2 GHz; 1 GB memory; 32 GB storage; WebOS/CyanogenMod 11(Kit Kat)
    HP 10 Plus; Android-Kit Kat; 1.0 GHz Allwinner A31 ARM Cortex A7 Quad Core Processor ; 2GB RAM Memory Long: 2 GB DDR3L SDRAM (1600MHz); 16GB disable eMMC 16GB v4.51
    HP Omen; i7-4710QH; 8 GB memory; 256 GB San Disk SSD; Win 8.1
    HP Photosmart 7520 AIO
    ++++++++++++++++++
    **Click the Thumbs Up+ to say 'Thanks' and the 'Accept as Solution' if I have solved your problem.**
    Intelligence is God given; Wisdom is the sum of our mistakes!
    I am not an HP employee.

  • Adding a solid state hard drive to a Mac Pro 3,1

    I have two hard drives in my Mac Pro 3,1.  I want to add a solid state hard drive and upgrade Yosemite to it.  I will eventually use my existing drive as extra storage.  Does anyone know if this model of Mac Pro can support SSD drive?  Also, can I mix and match normal hard drives with SSD drives?  I know I will also need an adapter since SSD's are 2.5 inch.  The one I am thinking about getting is the Kingston SSDNow V300 Series SV300S37A/240G 2.5" 240GB SATA III Internal Solid State Drive (SSD).  Any feedback that can confirm or deny compatibility would be appreciated. 
    Thanks,

    I have Mac Pro (4.1 2009 model) and I have Samsung SSD 840 EVO 500GB. There is an issue you you want to run Yosemite.  That drive requires that TRIM is enabled otherwise the perforamnce goes down. There is a Trim Enabler  that you can get but but default Yosemite rejects it and disables it so you end up with a driver with TRIM not eanbled. There is a hack that allows you to get it working again but it has some security implications.
    Just be aware of it.
    Tom

  • Can I put a solid state hard drive in my older MacBook Pro?

    Can this Macbook pro 2.2GHz MacBook Pro (MC723LL/A) be upgraded to a solid state hard drive?

    Yes. Visit OWC for suitable SSDs from their 3G collection. Also, you may look into their DataDoubler that lets you remove the optical drive and install the HDD in that space. They also will have some installation tutorials.

  • 2011 MACBOOK PRO WITH SOLID STATE HARD DRIVE.

    Hello everyone. I would like to know is it worth going with the 512 solid state hard drive or the 750 at 5400 rpm or 500 at 7200 rpm. My use is for Audio programs such as Serato, Logic and Protools. I would like to know if anyone has the solid state and how you like speed of the computer. Basically is it worth the 1100.00 extra.

    No one probably wants to touch this because it really is about how high end a user you can afford to be. I suspect your audio programs will work fine with a 7200 rpm hard drive, depending perhaps on file sizes. I did buy a 512gb ssd and put it in my 2010 mbp. It has read and write speeds comparable to what Mac promises with the in-house drives (maybe a little faster). If you can afford an ssd you would never go back to a hard-drive. It removes a performance bottleneck that will always be there to some degree with a regular hard-drive. 512gb ssd's are a luxury at this point. Your call.

  • FAILED: Solid State Hard Drive

    So bummed I've had the computer a year and just out of warantee.  I remember getting errors form the computer just after I got it but, my daughter was about to have a hemispherectomy (1/2 brain removed due to seizures) I hadn't had the time to get this error looked into.  I got the error every once in a while and ignored it there wasn't enough time to get the computer looked at with all the appointments for my daughter.  Now I'm a month out of warantee and had attempted to install Lion which failed because my solid state hard drive failed.  I guess the errors were coming from the hard drive.
    Sadly the computer was a Christmas gift from my husband last year and now I'm looking an an 800 dollar repair.  Simply the end to a year I wouldn't want to remember....sigh!
    I sure hope you guys have had better luck......

    Update:
         Phone call to retail store this AM and didn't get much the lead support guy was in training and I was told that he'd call me in the afternoon.  I called again at 3pm EST and was told that there isn't much they can do.  I am a month out of warantee.  They did tell me that if they sent my computer out to a authorized retailer that the cost would be 200 dollars instead of 800 dollars.  The said that the 800 dollars would be the cost to have my computer fixed at the store.
         I'm really bummed my kid was really sick and I didn't have time to spend on myself to get my computer fixed. Now that I have the time my computer is one month out of warantee.  I take great care of my laptops I had my last one for 8 years.  It was a Windows machine and it basically died from over use.  My mac air was a gift from my husband and it was like he was reading my mind because I wanted a mac with a solid state.
         The retail store told me to call Apple Care...I do understand that I am a month out of warantee and that is not anyones fault but mine but, for a solid state to go bad after a year that's just faulty hardware....COME ONE PEOPLE!!

  • I am buying a new macbook pro but i want to fit my own ram memory and solid state hard drive , will apple permit this without voiding the waranty.

    i am buying a new macbook pro but i want to fit my own ram memory and solid state hard drive , will apple permit this without voiding the waranty.

    yes you can do it and not void the warranty.  Those are the only hardware changes that Apple permits.  Instructions on how to upgrade the ram and remove and replace the hard drive are even included in the owners manuals for MacBook Pros.

  • INSTALLING SOLID STATE HARD DRIVE ON EXISTING MAC

    How difficult is it to install solid state hard drive on an existing mac, you can buy the solid state hard drive from crucisl and someon will put it in, anyone ever done this?

    Yes I have. It is very easy to do yourself. If you can turn a screw driver and unplug then replug one cable you can do it yourself.
    The hardest part is having a current backup or clone of your original drive, that is if you don't want to do a clean install of OS X and programs, and then restoring either to the SSD. Although that is fairly easy also.

  • Solid state hard drives?  why should it matter?

    So- I'm looking into getting a new laptop. Is there any real benefit to having a solid state hard drive?

    The theory behind SSD is sound, but the technology still has some catching up to do. One of the greatest benefits of SSD is that the drive doesn't have to spend the same amount of time that a conventional hard drive does to spin the platters around and properly align the heads to read the data it wants; with SSD, the data is always accessible right away. This is the same reason why conventional DDR3-800 memory has a theoretical peak transfer rate of 6400MB/s.
    SSD technology isn't quite on par with conventional memory yet, and as others have pointed out, many SSD drives deliver pretty lackluster performance. This doesn't mean SSD is a failed technology; it just hasn't reached its true potential. Even so, there are a few good SSD brands out there as long as you do your research. A well-designed, well-built SSD will outperform a conventional hard drive any day of the week, but a poorly-designed SSD won't impress anyone.

  • I am replacing my existing SATA hard drive to a Solid State hard drive and want to image the drive, is this possible?

    I am replacing my existing 320 GB SATA hard drive that clicks and makes weird noises to a Solid State hard drive and want to image the drive, is this possible?  I then want to replace the DVD with a secondary large drive for storage.
    So I am looking for any "gotchas" that I may be unaware of.
    Thanks!

    Put the Old drive in an external notebook drive enclosure. Install the SSD in your computer. Boot from your Old drive's Recovery HD:
    Boot to the Recovery HD:
    Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the COMMAND and R keys until the menu screen appears. Alternatively, restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager screen appears. Select the Recovery HD and click on the downward pointing arrow button.
    Clone Lion/Mountain Lion using Restore Option of Disk Utility
         1. Select Disk Utility from the main menu then press the Continue
             button.
         2. Select the destination volume from the left side list.
         3. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
         4. Select the destination volume from the left side list and drag it
             to the Destination entry field.
         5. Select the source volume from the left side list and drag it to
             the Source entry field.
         6. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    Destination means the New SSD. Source means the external Old hard drive.
    Set the new Startup Disk to the SSD and restart the computer.
    This process clones both your old OS X volume and the Recovery HD volume to the SSD. You can use a similar process to clone the SSD to the new hard drive you will install.

  • I have a 2007 20" iMac. Can I get a solid state hard drive installed?  Can the Apple store do it?  How long?  What cost?

    I have a 2007 20" iMac. Can I get a solid state hard drive installed?  Can the Apple store do it?  How long?  What cost?

    Sure-glad to help you. You will not lose any data by changing synching to MacBook Pro from imac. You have set up Time Machine, right? that's how you'd do your backup, so I was told, and how I do my backup on my mac.  You should be able to set a password for it. Save it.  Your stuff should be saved there. So if you want to make your MacBook Pro your primary computer,  I suppose,  back up your stuff with Time machine, turn off Time machine on the iMac, turn it on on the new MacBook Pro, select the hard drive in your Time Capsule, enter your password, and do a backup from there. It might work, and it might take a while, but it should go. As for clogging the hard drive, I can't say. Depends how much stuff you have, and the hard drive's capacity.  As for moving syncing from your iMac to your macbook pro, should be the same. Your phone uses iTunes to sync and so that data should be in the cloud. You can move your iTunes Library to your new Macbook pro
    you should be able to sync your phone on your new MacBook Pro. Don't know if you can move the older backups yet-maybe try someone else, anyways,
    This handy article from Apple explains how
    How to move your iTunes library to a new computer - Apple Support''
    don't forget to de-authorize your iMac if you don't want to play purchased stuff there
    and re-authorize your new macBook Pro
    time machine is an application, and should be found in the Applications folder. it is built in to OS X, so there is nothing else to buy. double click on it, get it going, choose the Hard drive in your Time capsule/Airport as your backup Time Machine  and go for it.  You should see a circle with an arrow on the top right hand of your screen (the Desktop), next to the bluetooth icon, and just after the wifi and eject key (looks sorta like a clock face). This will do automatic backups  of your stuff.

Maybe you are looking for

  • 2 Apps with the same name?

    Hi everybody! I finished my work on two ipad-magazines a few days ago (english/german version). The plan is, to transfer the whole .app package to our customer, who will publish the apps in the Apple App Store himself. Now, there has been a lot of di

  • Mother of All Bonehead Questions---AirPort network. What can I do?

    This is a very basic question. But, it's been driving me crazy. Right now I have an AirPort Express plugged into my cable modem. This iMac is getting its internet through said AirPort. My wife's eMac is plugged into the AP via a cable. That's how it

  • PO report by account assignment

    Hi! There is this report ME2K to display PO's by account assignment, but I cannot find to make it work without cost center. I would like to find PO lines by account assignment "E", but don't see this report suitable for that. ME2K is called "Purchasi

  • Pop-up window to display error message

    hi all, how can i show error messages in pop-up window keeping its status as 'e'? plz help. rgds, avijit

  • Picture in selection screen (saved in clustertable) how to load?

    Hi everybody, we got an ABAP on wich a picture should be displayed. As we want wo have the picture in a transport ( to dispatch the ABAP on several other SAP systems ), we decided to store it in a cluster table: This is the way we store it:    CALL F