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View Full Version : Need a new MacBook HDD. Help me pick a good one? :)




Prof.
Aug 7, 2009, 01:11 AM
I have a mid-2007 MacBook and I think it's time I get a bigger HDD. I was wondering if you guys and gals could help me find a reliable replacement. Right now I have a 160 GB HDD (5400RPM). I was thinking about getting a HDD that's around 320 GB or more. Preferably 500 with 7200 RPM if at all possible.

What do you recommend me getting? I'd like to keep the price under US$100.00 if possible.

Thanks for your help!

Prof.

PS - do I need an SATA drive or an ATA drive...?:confused:



MacMini2009
Aug 7, 2009, 01:12 AM
500GB Seagate 7200.4

or

Western Digital 500GB Scorpio Blue (5400RPM)

NewMacbookPlz
Aug 7, 2009, 01:17 AM
9.5mm tall SATA drive.

They're almost all 9.5mm form factor, just not the newest 750GB model that came out, that's 12.5mm.

Prof.
Aug 7, 2009, 01:20 AM
750 GBs!?!?!?!? GIMME!!!!!!!!:eek::D

MacMini2009
Aug 7, 2009, 01:30 AM
750 GBs!?!?!?!? GIMME!!!!!!!!:eek::D

There is also a 1TB 12.5mm 2.5in hard drive.

GfulDedFan
Aug 7, 2009, 06:13 AM
I highly recommend the WD Scorpio Black (http://www.amazon.com/Western-Digital-Scorpio-Black-WD3200BEKT/dp/B001CO3EKQ) but I guess it's somewhat puny by today's standards. I've had it in both my First Gen and Aluminum and it works well in them. -GDF

Prof.
Mar 25, 2010, 01:10 AM
I'm about to buy this (http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822148375&cm_re=2.5_sata_hard_drive-_-22-148-375-_-Product) HDD. My main concern is that it is a "Bare Drive." What exactly is a bare drive? Would it work with my MacBook right out of the box or do I need to modify it somehow?

(L)
Mar 25, 2010, 02:20 AM
Yo dawg, I'm in the same boat. (My apologies for calling you a dog.)

I'm looking at this one, though:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B002FYJQB8/

The one you found is one I found early on in my search, but note that this one has the added shock protection:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B002CQA2NU/

The reason I ultimately decided on Hitachi is that I started seeing reviews of these Seagate drives that they make lots of noise, odd noises, break down, etc. All drives of this sort are hit or miss, in my opinion, but SSDs are so pricey... But the Hitachi is a few more dollars.

To get it to work with the MacBook, as I intend to, I believe you should buy a case for it to stick it in, copy your data/install Mac OS X, and only then remove it from the case to replace your MacBook HDD. You need something to connect the bare drive to your Mac while doing this, and I think the case I'm looking at makes this possible. Then, when you've swapped them, your old one is immediately good as an external drive, if I'm not mistaken.

Hope that helps, but I'm just at the same novice level as you, so hopefully if I'm wrong on any of this someone can correct me.:o

richard.mac
Mar 25, 2010, 02:34 AM
I'm about to buy this (http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822148375&cm_re=2.5_sata_hard_drive-_-22-148-375-_-Product) HDD. My main concern is that it is a "Bare Drive." What exactly is a bare drive? Would it work with my MacBook right out of the box or do I need to modify it somehow?

the 250GB 7200.4 is really good i have it and had no problems (i think the previous generation had problems). gets burst speeds of around 100MB/s (500GB model is a bit faster) and is very quiet, pretty much silent in ambient surroundings.

the Scorpio Black is probably a bit faster, but ive heard is a bit louder.

kernkraft
Mar 25, 2010, 02:40 AM
I have a Seagate one (ST9320423AS) with 320GB, 7200 rpm, large buffer and a free-drop sensor. It was very cheap, I paid around $60 for it. It stopped my beach ball problem (or was that the 4GB RAM upgrade?).

It's pretty silent and energy efficient too. But if these would not be important, I would definitely get a Scorpion Blue or Black. They are very, very good!

Cheffy Dave
Mar 25, 2010, 03:37 AM
Yo dawg, I'm in the same boat. (My apologies for calling you a dog.)

I'm looking at this one, though:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B002FYJQB8/

The one you found is one I found early on in my search, but note that this one has the added shock protection:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B002CQA2NU/

The reason I ultimately decided on Hitachi is that I started seeing reviews of these Seagate drives that they make lots of noise, odd noises, break down, etc. All drives of this sort are hit or miss, in my opinion, but SSDs are so pricey... But the Hitachi is a few more dollars.

To get it to work with the MacBook, as I intend to, I believe you should buy a case for it to stick it in, copy your data/install Mac OS X, and only then remove it from the case to replace your MacBook HDD. You need something to connect the bare drive to your Mac while doing this, and I think the case I'm looking at makes this possible. Then, when you've swapped them, your old one is immediately good as an external drive, if I'm not mistaken.

Hope that helps, but I'm just at the same novice level as you, so hopefully if I'm wrong on any of this someone can correct me.:o

Go to OWC and look at the cases with HDD as well as all the cords, FW and USB. One neat package. Just installed a WD Scorpio Black 320 GB in 2 Black Mac Books and a first gen Aluminum MBP, copied the hard drive using "Super Duper" went flawlessly, removed the drive from the case popped it in the MB and VOILA! ,booted first time.;)
Here's a link,
http://www.macsales.com/newsletter/OWCBlast03-24-2010.html
They even have VIDEOS on how to do it as well as install the new drive.!:eek:
Once done, pop the old drive into the case, to use it as a FW/USB EXTERNAL back up(Time Machine )drive

(L)
Mar 25, 2010, 04:57 PM
Go to OWC and look at the cases with HDD as well as all the cords, FW and USB. One neat package. Just installed a WD Scorpio Black 320 GB in 2 Black Mac Books and a first gen Aluminum MBP, copied the hard drive using "Super Duper" went flawlessly, removed the drive from the case popped it in the MB and VOILA! ,booted first time.;)
Here's a link,
http://www.macsales.com/newsletter/OWCBlast03-24-2010.html
They even have VIDEOS on how to do it as well as install the new drive.!:eek:
Once done, pop the old drive into the case, to use it as a FW/USB EXTERNAL back up(Time Machine )drive

Thanks.

I'm not sure, but from the looks of their kits, maybe a special screwdriver (torx?) is required? I dunno. I think I'll try opening up my MacBook today to check. Anyway, I guess that's an extra 10 bucks because it's just so hard to use normal screws?:(

Jay S.
Mar 25, 2010, 06:29 PM
I'm quite partial to western digital myself. I'd go scorpio black 320 gb (7200 rpm) or scorpio blue 500gb (5400 rpm). I personally run the scorpio blue and it is great. You should have no problems with the bare drive as long as you have an enclosure to throw it in.

lyons238
Mar 25, 2010, 11:39 PM
my seagate momentus 500gb 7200.4 works great. quite, my battery life remains, fast (despite what some users have reported)

bojangles9999
Mar 27, 2010, 10:46 PM
after hearing about the new toshiba 9.5mm 750gb drive, i did a search and found this for sale:

http://www.goharddrive.com/ProductDetails.asp?ProductCode=G02-0138&Click=46406

they're saying that it ships within a day or two, but i thought toshiba was the first to launch a drive like this, and that they're not even being mass manufactured until april. anyone have any clue what the story is behind this?:confused:

Prof.
Mar 27, 2010, 11:00 PM
Where do I buy a "case" for the new HDD that will work with my MB?

richard.mac
Mar 27, 2010, 11:24 PM
did a quick search for "firewire 800 hard drive enclosure" and found a few. i recommend these:

http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Other%20World%20Computing/MSTG800U2K/
http://oyendigital.com/hard-drives/store/EB2-S.html
http://www.cooldrives.com/2saiihddcawi.html

Prof.
Mar 28, 2010, 02:18 PM
did a quick search for "firewire 800 hard drive enclosure" and found a few. i recommend these:

http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Other%20World%20Computing/MSTG800U2K/
http://oyendigital.com/hard-drives/store/EB2-S.html
http://www.cooldrives.com/2saiihddcawi.html
Wait... the case doesn't go on the hard drive that goes in my Mac. :confused:

I thought I need a top case to cover up the circuitry before I put the new HDD in?

lyons238
Mar 28, 2010, 02:54 PM
you buy a new hard drive and an external caddy for your old hard drive so you can transfer your data. you can find these cases at newegg under hard drive enclosures. pick the 2.5" sata

i also recommend the seagate momentus 7200.4 500gb. works very well with no noticeable noise, vibration, heat, or power consumption.

Prof.
Mar 28, 2010, 03:09 PM
you buy a new hard drive and an external caddy for your old hard drive so you can transfer your data. you can find these cases at newegg under hard drive enclosures. pick the 2.5" sata
Ooooh okay. I was just gonna use Time Machine once i got the OS installed.
i also recommend the seagate momentus 7200.4 500gb. works very well with no noticeable noise, vibration, heat, or power consumption.
Thanks! I'm assuming that HDD is a bit pricy. I'll have to save up a lil more so I can get it. :D

:eek: It's only 99 on newegg (http://www.newegg.com/product/product.aspx?Item=N82E16822148374)! I'm buying it as soon as I get paid in two weeks. :D

So once I buy it, I just install it in my MacBook? No modification required? I've never replaced a HDD before. Sorry for all the questions.

lyons238
Mar 28, 2010, 03:18 PM
Ooooh okay. I was just gonna use Time Machine once i got the OS installed.

Thanks! I'm assuming that HDD is a bit pricy. I'll have to save up a lil more so I can get it. :D

:eek: It's only 99 on newegg (http://www.newegg.com/product/product.aspx?Item=N82E16822148374)! I'm buying it as soon as I get paid in two weeks. :D

So once I buy it, I just install it in my MacBook? No modification required? I've never replaced a HDD before. Sorry for all the questions.

dont worry bro i had the same questions before. i can help u install it.


basically you unscrew the back plate. touch anything metal to release any static in your body. unscrew the retaining piece on the hard drive. pop the hd out. unscrew the mounting screws with a T6 torx screwdriver. put the mounting screws in the new hd. connect the sata cable, and place the hd in place. then screw the retaining piece back in. screw the bottom plate back in.

boot up the macbook with the install disk in. install osx. it will prompt you to partion your drive just pick osx (journaled or w/e, you will know what i mean when you see it). then make sure you partion it as GUID.

then once osx is installed put your old hard drive in the external caddy, plug it in, and you can transfer any files you want.

i recommend doing it this way instead of cloning your old drive, so you start fresh with a fresh install and your hard drive is clean. you might have to re download some of your apps. but just write them down on some paper and do it.

Prof.
Mar 28, 2010, 03:23 PM
Looks like I'll have to run out and buy a T6 torx screwdriver. Can I get that at any hardware store?

Found one! (http://www.amazon.com/Wiha-36210-Torx-Screwdriver-Powerhandle/dp/B001AN17SK) :D

pabloconrad
Mar 28, 2010, 04:01 PM
Looks like I'll have to run out and buy a T6 torx screwdriver. Can I get that at any hardware store?

Found one! (http://www.amazon.com/Wiha-36210-Torx-Screwdriver-Powerhandle/dp/B001AN17SK) :D

You can also buy one at Sears (Craftsman) or an auto part store. Changing the hard drive is easy.

The tools you'll need are a #0 phillips (small) and the T6 Torx.

Simple to do. Also OWC has a video you can watch that shows you how to do it:http://eshop.macsales.com/installvideos/macbook_13_mem_hd_h/

Hope this helps

owen22
Mar 29, 2010, 07:37 AM
Also OWC has a video you can watch that shows you how to do it:http://eshop.macsales.com/installvideos/macbook_13_mem_hd_h/

Although I haven't seen this specific clip I can't recommend watching a video enough!

Printed step-by-step guides are great (and should be your main point of reference if you only have one computer in your house) but nothing beats seeing it done on video a couple of time before you attmept it for the first time.