drive in to a desktop. Make an image of the drive and writeit to the new >drive."My question is - is it just as possible to use this general method,but instead of linki ">

laptop HDD xfer. Yes/No follow-ups to previous answer. Best answer on the web

Jan 08, 2009 @ 06:13 am by admin
  • An excellent answer (fully copied below) was provided to a previous
    customer. I want to go for Method 4
    >"Get a copy of Ghost, a 2.5" Laptop 44 pin to 40 pin IDE adapter, and
    plug the >drive in to a desktop. Make an image of the drive and write
    it to the new >drive."
    My question is - is it just as possible to use this general method,
    but instead of linking the laptop drives (first old, then new) to the desktop with the adapter - to link them to the desktop via the new USB hard drive enclosure i have ordered? (I do not want to re-install OS, settings and software etc.)
    (also - another yes/no if willing - I'm upgrading a 12GB drive to an
    80GB 5400rpm (Travelstar) drive on my Compaq Armada M300 PIII 600MhZ
    running W2K Pro SP4. Do I need to upgrade my BIOS? Is this a simple
    enough download, if so?
    (BIOS String . . . SGRAM BIOS 4.184T(P60)-d
    Adapter String . . 1002-4C49-DC-0E11-B11B System Board ID . . . . 53C
    Bios Release Date . . 9/18/2001)


    Answer

    Subject: Re: Hard drive replacement of Toshiba laptop
    Answered By: hibiscus-ga on 07 Jan 2003 22:14 PST
    Rated:
    Hello heinz57,

    The thickness of the drive shouldn't cause you any severe problems.
    It is likely that the drive will screw in to some sort of bracket and
    the couple of millimeters that are shaved off the new drive won't be a
    big deal. As long as the drive plugs in to the motherboard alright
    then it's likely that it won't be a problem. However, the only way to
    know this for sure is to open the machine up and try the new drive in
    the machine. I've never had a problem with a drive being too _thin_.
    Too thick is another issue.

    As for how to actually install this drive, this unit is supposed to
    have a removable drive according to Toshiba, which suggests that it's
    fairly easily accessible. On the bottom of the unit you should see a
    panel that can be opened by unscrewing one or two screws. This will
    reveal the drive. It can be removed by pulling it firmly but gently.
    Pull out first, then up, since it has to disconnect from the IDE
    connection pins on the board first before it can be taken out of the
    machine. You may wish to open the panel up and check how the drive is
    attached to ascertain whether you will be able to mount the thinner
    drive. Again, shouldn't be a problem, but it's better to find this
    out now than to find it out after doing all the data transfer!

    Before installing the new drive you may also want to upgrade the BIOS
    to the latest version. This will smooth any problems with the system
    recognizing the drive properly. You can get all the latest Toshiba
    driver upgrades from their service and support site. The page is
    here, but you have to go through a few menus to select the proper
    model: http://www.csd.toshiba.com/cgi-bin/tais/su/su_sc_home.jsp

    The hardware part of this is nothing much to worry about. The bigger
    hassle is going to be the data transfer. There are a few products on
    the market that automate the process for you. They allow you to plug
    in an adapter in to the PCMCIA slot and dump the contents of one drive
    to another. They aren't cheap but they work well. The EZ-Gig data
    transfer kit shown here at Bix Computers is a good example:
    http://www.bixnet.com/ezdattrankit.html Kingston Technologies also
    used to have hard drive upgrade kits that came with a drive and the
    PCMCIA card. This is the ideal way to do things.

    I'm going to assume that you don't want to buy one of these kits
    though. The next easiest way to do this is to take it to a computer
    shop and pay them to do the transfer. It shouldn't be overwhelmingly
    expensive and it could save you a lot of time and frustration.

    If you don't want to do that either you have a few options. If you
    have a network then you can dump all the data from the old drive on to
    another machine, install the new drive in the laptop, install a fresh
    version of your operating system on it, and copy back the data files
    over the network. This will require that you reinstall all your
    software and drivers, which is quite annoying. You could do much the
    same thing if you have a CD burner in the machine or attached to it.
    Burn the data files and then transfer them back to the new drive.

    But this doesn't give you an exact replica of the old drive. The only
    way to do that is to use a drive duplicator program of some kind.
    Norton's Ghost is a fantastic product that does an admirable job of
    this. You can find it at Symantec's web site here:
    http://www.symantec.com/sabu/ghost/ghost_personal/ but you must
    purchase it for $69.95. Basically, this program can make a clone of
    one drive to another, or can make an image of a drive which is stored
    somewhere else which can then be written on another drive. There are
    shareware/freeware utilities that do similar things, but I have never
    found anything as good as Ghost and I have used it without a hitch on
    probably over a hundred computers.

    The problem is, even with a copy of Ghost, you either need to have the
    two drives plugged in at the same time, or you need to be able to
    store the image file on another drive and then load it up on to the
    new drive. This is just not possible with the laptop, since it can
    only use one drive at a time. The easiest solution would be to use
    drive adapters that allow you to plug laptop drives in to desktop
    systems. These are available at any decent computer shop and are
    probably in the $10-15 range. CablesOnline has them available for
    order, and this gives you some idea of what they look like:
    http://www.cablesonline.net/25hdmounkitw.html

    If you purchased one of those, then installed your old drive in a
    desktop with another hard drive, ran Ghost, made an image of your old
    drive, then installed the new drive into the desktop, wrote the image
    with Ghost, and finally installed the new drive into your laptop, this
    would accomplish what you set out to do. But as you can imagine this
    is a rather involved sort of process. Since it requires you
    purchasing both an adapter and a copy of Ghost, I would suggest you're
    better off just taking it to a local computer shop to have this done.

    So, your options are these:

    1. Install the new drive and start fresh. Install a new OS and all
    your software again. This would give you a nice clean system to work
    with, but you lose all your data.

    2. Same as above, but copy the data files you want on to another
    machine via a network or on to a CD. This is not a bad way of doing
    things, but if you aren't comfortable reinstalling everything it's
    probably not a great solution.

    3. Buy a hard drive copying kit. Great solution if you're planning on
    doing this again, but otherwise it's a fairly expensive way to go.
    You might find a used kit on ebay though, which wouldn't be a bad
    idea.

    4. Get a copy of Ghost, a 2.5" Laptop 44 pin to 40 pin IDE adapter,
    and plug the drive in to a desktop. Make an image of the drive and
    write it to the new drive. This would work well, but it's again
    probably going to be more trouble than you want.

    5. Go to a computer store to have this done.

    Sadly, laptops are not the easiest things to upgrade. That's the
    tradeoff for portability I suppose. I think you're probably going to
    do best by calling around to repair shops and getting quotes on this.
    It shouldn't be more than $75 I would think. A competent technician
    with the right tools could do this in about an hour.

    I hope this proved helpful to you. Do let me know if you need further
    clarification on any details.

    Hibiscus


  • while in the Travelstar marketspace consider a Hitachi 60GB 7200rpm 8MB buffer
    in a quiet 2.5 inch notebook drive, designated model 7K60

    Hitachi and IBM merged certain storage into Global Storage Technologies

    http://www.hitachigst.com/tech/techlib.nsf/techdocs/CB59FF8DC222DB9886256CF3007D1706/$file/Travelstar7K60-Datasheet.pdf