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Laptop hard drive compatibility?
I'm looking into getting a new laptop (the Acer Aspire 2012WLMi), but the model I'm looking at only has a 4200 RPM hard drive. I think I might upgrade it to a 7200 RPM drive (probably the Hitachi 60GB one. It's not cheap, but this laptop will probably (hopefully) last me a while, so I think it'll be worthwhile. The reviews I saw on NewEgg said it was a good purchase).
There aren't any compatibility issues between laptop hard drives and laptop brands (namely Acer), are there? No issues with proprietary parts, right?
I didn't think there'd be any issues, but I wanted to check and make sure.
Thanks.
Oh, and once I get the laptop, I'll be sure to post a review here
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Hammerhead Shark
i'm 99.9% sure all these modern notebook hard drives are inter-compatible (is that a word? ). check with the seller to be 100% sure, but unless acer has some weird proprietary situation (doubtful) you should be fine.
Last edited by serotone9; 07-22-2004 at 10:05 PM.
workstation: athlon xp-m [email protected] | epox 8rda+ | 512mb | seagate 80gb+160gb | arch linux
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Mako Shark
I would check the thinkness of the laptop harddrive. I have a 2.5in hard drive, I bought an enclosure for it, the enclosure case wouldn't fit because the HD I have it too thick, I assume they make some that are less thick that would fit in that enclosure.
Last edited by mynameis; 07-29-2004 at 10:44 AM.
MacBook Pro 13-inch, 2.3Ghz i5, 8GB RAM, 640GB HD
Desktop: i5 2500K (w/ CM Hyper 212 Plus) , 16GB DDR3, 2x240GB OCZ Agility SSD, 2x1TB in RAID0, 2xeVGA GeForce GTX 570, Corsair TX750M PSU, ASUS Sabertooth P67, Dell 2209WA eIPS LCD
Home Server: Intel Pentium G630, ASRock H61M/U3S3, 4GB RAM, 80GB + 2TB HD
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Most notebook drives require a proprietary caddy of some sort if the drive is accessable without taking the case apart. The other thing to check is the wattage on the new drive versus the wattage required by the old drive. Notebook power is notoriously stingy.
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Goldfish
I have the hitachi and it was a very good drive in my i8600. It died today without any warining so I would check on the return policy and warraty. In my dell it was part of the audio jack so you should probably make sure that it well be able to be placed in your acer like mynameis suggested.
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Mako Shark
Originally posted by jimmyjazz
In my dell it was part of the audio jack so you should probably make sure that it well be able to be placed in your acer like mynameis suggested.
Your dell is similar to my dell, the hard drive tray is the part with the audio jacks on it, but you can remove the hard drive from that tray and replace it with some standard 2.5in drives.
Last edited by mynameis; 07-29-2004 at 10:43 AM.
MacBook Pro 13-inch, 2.3Ghz i5, 8GB RAM, 640GB HD
Desktop: i5 2500K (w/ CM Hyper 212 Plus) , 16GB DDR3, 2x240GB OCZ Agility SSD, 2x1TB in RAID0, 2xeVGA GeForce GTX 570, Corsair TX750M PSU, ASUS Sabertooth P67, Dell 2209WA eIPS LCD
Home Server: Intel Pentium G630, ASRock H61M/U3S3, 4GB RAM, 80GB + 2TB HD
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Originally posted by mynameis
Your dell is similar to my dell, the hard drive tray is the part with the audio jacks on it, but you can remove the hard drive from that tray and replace it with some standard 3.5in drives.
Don't you mean 2.5in drives?
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Mako Shark
Originally posted by ua549
Don't you mean 2.5in drives?
Yeah, I have been saying 3.5in this entire time, when I meant 2.5in, I'll go back and edit that.
MacBook Pro 13-inch, 2.3Ghz i5, 8GB RAM, 640GB HD
Desktop: i5 2500K (w/ CM Hyper 212 Plus) , 16GB DDR3, 2x240GB OCZ Agility SSD, 2x1TB in RAID0, 2xeVGA GeForce GTX 570, Corsair TX750M PSU, ASUS Sabertooth P67, Dell 2209WA eIPS LCD
Home Server: Intel Pentium G630, ASRock H61M/U3S3, 4GB RAM, 80GB + 2TB HD
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I would not worry about competibility as long as your laptop is usung 2.5 drives (I am sure it does as all the contemporary laptops).
Very good descision to replace 4200 HD wit 7200.
I did this about a year ago and could not be happier. Great improvement. Hitachi is the great choice. Quiet, fast, reliable.
Get a usb]firewire enclosure for the original drive and enjoy the added benefit of a portable storage also.
Good luck.
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Hey guys. Thanks for the replies. I actually got my new notebook a few days ago and swapped out the hard drives successfully.
At first, there was a bit of confusion as I put in the new hard drive and the computer didn't recognize it. At this point I started freaking out thinking it was defective or incompatible or something. So, I took it out, lined it up with the old one to make sure they were the same size, shape, connector, etc. At first they looked just about identical, then I saw that the connectors were actually different. Now I'm thinking "Oh great, they have different connections! I'm not going to be able to use the new one!"
Then I realized the hard drive that came with the computer just had a removable plug extension so that it'd dock into the case more easily. 
So then, I was like "Whew!" I took it off the old drive, stuck on the new one, slid it into the case, and everything worked out from there.
The old one now resides in an external enclosure. I figure I'll use it to backup my new one every once in a while (if I'm good about it ). It still has the original
And as a side note, the new laptop has been working great. It's the Acer Aspire 2012WLMi and has a Pentium M 1.5Ghz, Mobility Radeon 9700, and 512MB RAM. I'll try and get around to posting a detailed review at some point soon.
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Hammerhead Shark
mmm, is the original hard drive that slow? Since I'm getting the same model as you I'd like to know
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