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Upgrading from 4200 to 5400rpm HDD - how?
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
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Next summer I'm thinkin about upgrading my lovely PB from 512 ram to a gig of ram and going from a 4200rpm HDD to a 5400rpm one. Can I switch the HDDs myself? or will I have to send it into apple? I assume that u can swap hard drives right?
Also which hard drives would u reccomend looking into?
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Professional Poster
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Los Angeles of the East
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You can do the HD upgrade yourself but it will void your Applecare (unless you yourself are a certified Apple tech). You need to take it somewhere for an Apple tech to do if for you (which seems to always costs about half as much as the HD itself for the so called labor). If you don't have Applecare anymore and have decided on doing it yourself, then do a search for service manuals either here, or on google. Good luck.
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NOW YOU SEE ME! 2.4 MBP and 2.0 MBP (running ubuntu)
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
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Thanks, yea I never got the extended applecare so my warranty will be over by then anyways...Thats something I never liked about apple, u pay $2000 + for a computer and u only get a 90 day warranty...oh well.
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Professional Poster
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Los Angeles of the East
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No actually you have a 1year warranty upon purchase and 90day free tech support, after that if you call and ask for help it'll cost ya, thats why we go MacNN.
(offer not valid in states or countries that have laws and regulations which void Applecare by law)
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NOW YOU SEE ME! 2.4 MBP and 2.0 MBP (running ubuntu)
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Senior User
Join Date: Nov 2002
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Originally posted by ICD2k3:
Next summer I'm thinkin about upgrading my lovely PB from 512 ram to a gig of ram and going from a 4200rpm HDD to a 5400rpm one. Can I switch the HDDs myself? or will I have to send it into apple? I assume that u can swap hard drives right?
Also which hard drives would u reccomend looking into?
Which Powerbook do you have? Huge difference between a Ti and an Alu.
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Happily using a Mac since '89
MacPortable: 16Mhz 1meg/40meg System 6.0.8 - 16lbs Yeah baby!
Powerbook 17" 1.33Ghz 2GB/100GB 8x Superdrive
Powerbook 12" 867Mhz 1.125GB/80GB 2xDVD-R RPC1
MacbookPro 17" 2.33Ghz
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Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
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AL / 15" / 1.33 / 512mb / 64vram / backlit keyboard
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Senior User
Join Date: Nov 2002
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One can always replace the drive on a machine. It is just a matter of difficulty and comfort. In my opinion, the new Powerbooks are less accessible than the previous generations. I suggest you download the service manuals and thoroughly read them. If removing the topcase looks like a breeze to you, go for it! If it looks a bit daunting, you might think of using a certified tech.
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Happily using a Mac since '89
MacPortable: 16Mhz 1meg/40meg System 6.0.8 - 16lbs Yeah baby!
Powerbook 17" 1.33Ghz 2GB/100GB 8x Superdrive
Powerbook 12" 867Mhz 1.125GB/80GB 2xDVD-R RPC1
MacbookPro 17" 2.33Ghz
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Dedicated MacNNer
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Minneapolis, MN
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The Service Manuals Tomster mentioned can be found here.
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Professional Poster
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Yorktown, VA
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I think those are manuals for older models. He said he has an AlBook.
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Dedicated MacNNer
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Minneapolis, MN
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Oops! Wrong link.
Here's a page that has what you're looking for.
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Professional Poster
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Northwest Ohio
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Offline
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Originally posted by Tomster:
One can always replace the drive on a machine. It is just a matter of difficulty and comfort. In my opinion, the new Powerbooks are less accessible than the previous generations. I suggest you download the service manuals and thoroughly read them. If removing the topcase looks like a breeze to you, go for it! If it looks a bit daunting, you might think of using a certified tech.
The original poster has an Aluminum PowerBook. The hard drive in an Al PB is NOT a user installable part, and WILL void the warranty if they do it themselves.
The hard drive IS user installable in the Titanium PowerBooks, and changing it will NOT void the warranty.
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Senior User
Join Date: Nov 2002
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Originally posted by Person Man:
The original poster has an Aluminum PowerBook. The hard drive in an Al PB is NOT a user installable part, and WILL void the warranty if they do it themselves.
The hard drive IS user installable in the Titanium PowerBooks, and changing it will NOT void the warranty.
The question was not whether one would void the warranty but if in fact, one could change the hard drive. Warranty issues discussed in first reply.
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Happily using a Mac since '89
MacPortable: 16Mhz 1meg/40meg System 6.0.8 - 16lbs Yeah baby!
Powerbook 17" 1.33Ghz 2GB/100GB 8x Superdrive
Powerbook 12" 867Mhz 1.125GB/80GB 2xDVD-R RPC1
MacbookPro 17" 2.33Ghz
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Professional Poster
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Northwest Ohio
Status:
Offline
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Originally posted by ICD2k3:
Thanks, yea I never got the extended applecare so my warranty will be over by then anyways...Thats something I never liked about apple, u pay $2000 + for a computer and u only get a 90 day warranty...oh well.
Not true. You only get 90 days of full telephone support. The hardware is warranted for a full year after purchase. Think twice about putting the hard drive in your computer yourself if you will be doing it within the first year. Depends on how much you value the one year warranty.
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