Upgrading my 320G to a 1TB

Is it possible to bring my iMac to an authorized dealer and have them replace the 320G internal drive with a 1TB?
Sean

If you use the internal drive as your start up drive and then save documents on the external drive then you are saving space on the internal drive and can use it for whatever you want. Personally I keep things files valuable on my external drive (photos, music and sensitive documents) I would recommend against using a USB 2.0 drive for and external storage drive especially if you will be accessing it a lot. I would recommend a FW or preferably a FW 800 drive, you will find the IO speeds of FW800 far superior to USB 2.0. OWC's Mercury line and Lacie Quadra D2 line are both highly recommended on this forum. Both have USB, FW and FW 800 connections and both also have eSATA however the iMacs don't have an external eSATA port. If they did have an eSATA port I'd recommend using that as it's IO is even faster than FW800.
Regards,
Roger

Similar Messages

  • I want to upgrade my Hard Drive to 1TB and more.  What is the maximun Hard Drive I can install for a MacBook Pro 2009 Yesterday, I tried a SEAGATE SSHD but my screen was always a showing a QUESTION MARK (?). It's not the cable because when I put back

    I want to upgrade my Hard Drive to 1TB and more.
    What is the maximun Hard Drive I can install for a MacBook Pro 2009
    Yesterday, I tried a SEAGATE SSHD but my screen was always a showing a QUESTION MARK (?). It's not the cable because when I put back the old original version, everything works...Any sugestion of brabnding or procédure to upgrade my hard drive?

    The largest 2.5" dia SATA drives available are 2 TB in capacity.
    Have you tried the Seagate SSHD connected externally to the MBP via USB?  The drive itself may be faulty.
    Ciao.
    Here is a good place to start looking for a replacement drive:
    http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/hard-drives/2.5-Notebook/

  • Is there a way to upgrade the 512GB hdd to 1TB on a 2011 mbp under applecare so that the applecare is not voided?

    Is there a way to upgrade the 512GB hdd to 1TB on a 2011 mbp under applecare so that the applecare is not voided?
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    A hard drive replacement doesn't void warranty on a MacBook Pro, so you can replace the hard drive without worrying about its warranty. However, you have to be sure of what you are doing, because if you damage any part, you will void warranty.
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    Then, just reinstall OS X through OS X Recovery > http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4718 Hold Command, Option (Alt) and R keys while your Mac is starting, format the hard drive with Disk Utility and reinstall OS X or restore a Time Machine backup

  • Noob here, wanting to upgrade my MBP HD to 1TB.

    So I'm looking to upgrade the internal hard drive of my February 2011 13.3" Macbook Pro. It's 2.70GHz i7, 8GB RAM, current 500GB HD. Does anybody know what a good option would be? Preferably under $100, unless you can convince me that a more expensive one is worth the price difference
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    Cheers!

    Any 2.5" SATA Hard Disk Drive that is 9.5 mm thick will work in your MBP.  HGST and Seagate have performed well for me.  I have several 1 TB HDDs from each of those manufacturers.  Look at this link for possible selections:
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    Ciao.

  • Upgrade my 750gig drive to 1TB ?, what should i get ?

    Hi my MacBookPro is an early 2011 15"screen, it came with a 750gig hard drive 5,400rpm  fitted as standard.
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    timmy toad wrote:
    but i also phoned up Apple Care and spoke to a chap at the Apple Store who said that "it was not possible to change the hard drive"
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  • Brand New iMac 24" internal or external hard drive upgrade to 1TB?

    I just purchased a brand new iMac 24" MB325LL with a 320GB hard drive. I currently have 432GB of data on my PC and I would like to upgrade the hard drive to 1TB. I have 2 options and I need your advice:
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    Well, I don't have the budget for both and as I've already pointed out, Time Machine does not address my needs. It's a great backup solution, but what I need is a synchronization solution. I need to have the same versions of basic files, such as music, photos, documents, and other miscellaneous stuff on my iMac and my HP Vista laptop. Even if I were to get a MacBook in the future, I would still need the same set-up. That way, if something happens to either my iMac or my MacBook, I would always be able to simply copy-paste files from one machine to another. That's, sort of, my version of a perfect backup solution...unless, there's an option to load up files from a Time Machine backup onto a separate one (e.g. MacBook). In the end, Time Machine only partially addresses my need in keeping 2 machines backed up in a sense that it only backs up one of them. My solution kills 2 birds with one stone. I would have 2 syncronized computers (e.g. iMac + HP Laptop, iMac + MacBook) AND both computers would serve as mutual backup sources, since whatever happens to one of them, I would always be able to copy data from the other.
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  • I am having a new hard drive put in today and am upgrading to a 1tb. My time machine is only a 500gb will it still back up my files.

    Will my 500 gb time machine still back up my files after I upgrade my imac to a 1tb hard drive?

    Once your internal data exceeds the capacity of the Time Machine volume, you won’t be able to do a complete restore of your internal drive from that Time Machine backup.  The Time Machine Preferences does offer an Options button that you can click to exclude files and/or folders from the Time Machine backup.  For example, if you have a few hundred gigabytes of original captured video, you may not want to back those up but only the final version of the video that you edited.  Or if you have an extensive iTunes collection, you may not back up the music because it is possible to restore that from other sources.
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  • Macbook Pro freezes after upgrade to WD 1TB (WDC WD10TPVT-00HT5T1)

    Hi All,
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    Model: WDC WD10TPVT-00HT5T1
    Revision: 01.01A01
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    +Dec 5 08:34:53 macbook-pro smartd[47]: Device: IOService:/AppleACPIPlatformExpert/PCI0@0/AppleACPIPCI/SATA@B/AppleMCP79AHCI/PR T0@0/IOAHCIDevice@0/AppleAHCIDiskDriver/IOAHCIBlockStorageDevice, failed to read SMART Attribute Data+
    +Dec 5 09:04:53 macbook-pro smartd[47]: Device: IOService:/AppleACPIPlatformExpert/PCI0@0/AppleACPIPCI/SATA@B/AppleMCP79AHCI/PR T0@0/IOAHCIDevice@0/AppleAHCIDiskDriver/IOAHCIBlockStorageDevice, failed to read SMART Attribute Data+
    +Dec 5 12:14:02 macbook-pro smartd[47]: Device: IOService:/AppleACPIPlatformExpert/PCI0@0/AppleACPIPCI/SATA@B/AppleMCP79AHCI/PR T0@0/IOAHCIDevice@0/AppleAHCIDiskDriver/IOAHCIBlockStorageDevice, failed to read SMART Attribute Data+
    Next time when my laptop froze, I found same line is system log. I decided to run SMART tests on my drive. It reported SMART is disabled on my new drive.
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    +smartctl -s on /dev/disk0+
    +smartctl 5.39 2009-12-09 r2995 [i386-apple-darwin10.4.0] (local build)+
    +Copyright (C) 2002-9 by Bruce Allen, http://smartmontools.sourceforge.net+
    === START OF ENABLE/DISABLE COMMANDS SECTION ===
    SMART Enabled.
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    +sudo smartctl -T permissive -a /dev/disk0+
    Password:
    +smartctl 5.39 2009-12-09 r2995 [i386-apple-darwin10.4.0] (local build)+
    +Copyright (C) 2002-9 by Bruce Allen, http://smartmontools.sourceforge.net+
    +=== START OF INFORMATION SECTION ===+
    +Device Model: WDC WD10TPVT-00HT5T1+
    +Serial Number: WD-XXXXXXXXXXXX+
    +Firmware Version: 01.01A01+
    +User Capacity: 1,000,204,886,016 bytes+
    +Device is: Not in smartctl database [for details use: -P showall]+
    +ATA Version is: 8+
    +ATA Standard is: Exact ATA specification draft version not indicated+
    +Local Time is: Sun Dec 5 12:43:23 2010 GMT+
    +SMART support is: Available - device has SMART capability.+
    +SMART support is: Disabled+
    +Error SMART Values Read failed+
    +Smartctl: SMART Read Values failed.+
    +Error SMART Thresholds Read failed+
    +Smartctl: SMART Read Thresholds failed.+
    +=== START OF READ SMART DATA SECTION ===+
    +SMART overall-health self-assessment test result: PASSED+
    +General SMART Values:+
    +Offline data collection status: (0x00) Offline data collection activity+
    + was never started.+
    + Auto Offline Data Collection: Disabled.+
    +Total time to complete Offline+
    +data collection: ( 0) seconds.+
    +Offline data collection+
    +capabilities: (0x00) Offline data collection not supported.+
    +SMART capabilities: (0x0000) Automatic saving of SMART data is not implemented.+
    +Error logging capability: (0x00) Error logging supported.+
    + General Purpose Logging supported.+
    +SCT capabilities: (0x7035) SCT Status supported.+
    + SCT Feature Control supported.+
    + SCT Data Table supported.+
    +Error SMART Error Log Read failed+
    +Smartctl: SMART Error Log Read Failed+
    +Error SMART Error Self-Test Log Read failed+
    +Smartctl: SMART Self Test Log Read Failed+
    +Device does not support Selective Self Tests/Logging+
    It still report SMART is disabled and lot of tests failed.
    I then tried Smart Utility and I ran short tests using it. It got stuck and I had to cancel the test. I got following message in system log.
    +Dec 5 14:12:45 macbook-pro SMART Utility[1828]: smartctl returned error message: A mandatory SMART command failed: exiting. To continue, add one or more '-T permissive' options.+
    Is somebody else experiencing this issue? I will be really thankful if somebody can help me to figure out the problem and potential solution.
    Thanks

    No idea what's wrong with your drive, but the best thing to do is to bug Western Digital about it. Be sure to have the serial number when you call. they can help you to troubleshoot it, and if they determine it is faulty, they should replace it under warranty.
    I've not heard of this kind of problem before. How did you format it?
    If this drive has the built-in shock guard technology, there may be a conflict with Apple's built in Sudden Motion Sensor. If so, you can disable the Sudden Motion Sensor and see if this helps:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1934
    Good luck!
    Message was edited by: S.U.

  • MBP mid-2009 Freezing after Hard Drive upgrade -HELP!

    So, my Apple Care just ended and I was almost always at a full 320GB, so I decided to upgrade my hard drive to 1TB.  I purchased a Western Digital TB drive (9.5mm) at a store recommended by an Apple Genius and followed the instruction on youtube exactly, as well as having another visit to the Genius bar, ensuring I grounded myself often throughout the process. My computer is a 15" MBP originally loaded with Snow Leopard, now running OSX Lion.  I did a Time Machine backup prior to everything and also bought an enclosure for my old hard disk to use and it has yet to be wiped, but Disk Utility says that it's corrupt because 1 program's debug log says the number of files changed (after the time machine processing.) I did a Carbon Copy Clone prior to installing the hard drive as well, so when all was done, I was able to start the computer without issue.  (This program is what told me first that I had an issue with that debug log.  I'd tried to delete a huge folder that was taking up nearly 30GB before the clone, it was backed up on time machine and another backup drive.)
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    The only thing that I can think of is that your SATA cable may be bad... it's the first thing that I would try replacing. DIsk Utility wouldn't be able to detect a bad SATA cable - you'd just have random freezes and crashes.
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      2X Size: 4 GB
      Type: DDR3
      Speed: 1067 MHz
      Status: OK
    Graphics  NVIDIA GeForce 9400M 256 MB
    Serial Number  WQ9240Y466D
    Software  OS X 10.8.5 (12F45)
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      Model: Hitachi HTS545016B9SA02    
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    1TB Serial ATA Drive @ 5400 rpm
    SuperDrive 8x (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW)
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    Whygirl,
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  • Hard Drive and memory upgrade on macbook pro (13" mid 2009)

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    Go to their site, lookup your model MacBook Pro and see what upgrades are available.
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  • Mb881 how big of a hard drive will work? Will a 1tb hard drive work?

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    Hi, letmeno. If your 667MHz Powerbook has a DVI video-out port, it will format a nominal 160GB drive to its actual capacity (about 149GB) and use it happily, without any other limitations.
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    Hello, I have the mid 2007 released intel based imac. I am about to change my 1GB memory to 4GB memory per the info I found on the Apple support site (upgrading memory on mid 2007 imacs or later). I also want to upgrade my hard-drive to 1TB as I need more storage and already using 2 1-TB externals for pics and other misc files that take up too much space. My husband says he doesnt think it can be done and I might as well suck it up and buy a new imac already with the specs I want. I am considering this but am so attached to my current imac (my first ever) that I would prefer to upgrade if possible before just jumping into a new one. My 2 questions are...
    1) can my harddrive be upgraded to 1 or 2TB? If so, should I pay someone to do this, meaning is it difficult?
    2) Does Apple do this and how much would this typically cost me? Do you think it is smarter to just trade this old one in for a new one?
    Thanks,
    Lani
    2)

    Yes, they are upgradable, and it isn't nearly as hard as the other posters will have you believe.
    If you have the aptitude to do surgery on computers than yes this might be correct, however if you don't I think it would be difficult and not recommended.
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    Still on Snow Leopard so yes.
    My advise: use two drives: leaving your current as is.
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    2 - Use the Disk Utility (Applications - Utilities) to create a DMG of your bootcamp partition - move this to a networked computer
    3 - Create a bootable CD of the partition management program "GParted" by downloading and burning an ISO from their website.
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    4 - Install your new hard drive - plenty of videos around on how to do this, not hard.
    5 - Plug in the drive that you used to create a backup of the MAC OS and hold down option when turning on - boot from the external drive
    6 - Using the disk utility, create two partitions on your brnad new internal HD. Size doesn't really matter at this stage - just so long as one is big enough to fit the MAC OS
    7 - Using SuperDuper copy your MAC OS back onto the first of the new partitions
    8 - Before you restart, restore the DMG image you've stored on a networked computer (Images-scan for restore) to the second partition. It's important that you are still running off the external drive when you do this as otherwise you'll get a "resource busy" error when you try to restore.
    9 - Shutdown. Turn on holding down option. Fire up the GParted disk you made early. It's an ugly interface, but gets the job done. Just accept the default settings when asked questions when starting up.
    10 - Using Gparted delete any extra partitions that have may have crept in (I had a FAT32 200MB partition that was causing issues) - what you should have is only two partitions the HFS and the NTFS partitions. You can resize these to whatever you feel like. This may take some time. Moving partitions around on a 750GB new drive took about 4 hours. Shutdown and unplug everything.
    11 -  Turn on and hold option. Select the Mac OS hard drive and your OSX will start. At this stage you won't be able to boot into Windows - that comes in a moment.
    12 - Download and install ReFit. Go into system preferences-startup disk and and make sure that the Mac OS is selected. Restart twice. Twice is important - that's when you should be greeted with the ReFit screen when you restart the second time.
    13 - On the refit menu, select the option to the right of the command prompt icon (the partition tool) - it will ask you if it can sync the Mac boot table with the Win boot table (something like adding the MBR to the boot schedule) - say yes. It takes less than a second.
    14 - Restart - and again hold option. Grab your original Windows installation CD and boot into it. Select your region and then go to "Repair your computer". Ignore the message about being able to fix and restart (choose No). Then choose Startup Repair. It'll do its thing. You can then restart.
    15 - You should now have a working OSX and Bootcamp drive on your new hard drive - exactly as it was on the old one. Without dropping a cent on software and a great sense of achievement.

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