Is your HDD actually broken? If not, you can remove the HDD yourself and use an external hard drive enclosure, to access your files.
I personally use an IODD 2531, it's works very similar but you use a menu on the screen to pick an ISO.
Link: https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B00TDJ4BJU
(Note: It's basically the same as the Zalman enclosures but apparently with better firmware)
As they both support Secure Boot it really doesn't matter which one you use, I prefer the IODD though as I can set it to be only the ISO with no access to the disk.
I'd recommend this one .
The factors are you looking for are:
*USB-C for easy power and fast file -transfer
*the size of the enclosure should be 2.5", the form factor of the SSD.
You gotta check out a 2.5 enclosure, just pop in the ssd, connect it to the laptop by usb and clone https://www.amazon.com/Sabrent-Tool-free-Enclosure-Optimized-EC-UASP/dp/B00OJ3UJ2S/ref=sr_1_5?keywords=sata+hdd+enclosure&qid=1568905424&s=gateway&sr=8-5
All you need is your hard drive, as long as that isn't the broken part in your computer (sounds like a power issue though so you should be fine).
Might be a bit intimidating if you've never been inside a computer before, but you shouldn't need more than a screwdriver to be able to remove the drive (lots of guides online for how to do it). Then you could put it inside an enclosure like this and it will function like a regular external hard drive. All your data, including the farms, will still be there.
You guys... You can do this all on one drive, and it's as easy as getting a 2.5"drive and copying some ISO's onto it.
Iodd Iodd2531 Black - Usb3.0 - HDD -Ssd - Virtual Cd-ROM - Enclosures - Made in Korea https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00TDJ4BJU/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_2fGnCbT77EKJ8
I got tired of losing flash drives and put a couple ssd's in external enclosures likes this
I bought one of these to consolidate drives into a single enclosure:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B003X26VV4/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_9jgpDbERCY0PX
They sell 8 drive versions as well.
It's a bit on the expensive side, but it was worth it for me because of the space savings, fewer USB drives, less cable mess, and plug points.
It really depends on what you want to store, how much and the amount of money you want to spend
I have one of these https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B003X26VV4/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_glt_fabc_R658KKQKC6W9BHWE0247?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
With four 8tb drives, so two sets s of redundant drives. One set holds my data: source code, books, others. The other set is my music, tv shows and movies.
I have one other set of two drives with my photos and videos.
All of this is backed up using Crash Plan.
I also have another set of drives that are backed up and placed into a fireproof safe.
Your needs, obviously, will be different. I added on as I needed, and it's easy to use Windows included drive dup Storage Spaces
I've used this exact drive before for Wii games. No issues.
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And rather than an adapter, I'd get an enclosure. Here's a good one: Amazon.com: SABRENT 2.5-Inch SATA to USB 3.0 Tool-Free External Hard Drive Enclosure [Optimized for SSD, Support UASP SATA III] Black (EC-UASP): Computers & Accessories
I am thinking ssd with an external enclosure.
SSK Aluminum M.2 NVME SSD Enclosure Adapter, USB 3.1 Gen 2 (10 Gbps) to NVME PCI-E M-Key Solid State Drive External Enclosure (Fits only NVMe PCIe 2242/2260/2280) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07MNFH1PX/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_glt_fabc_80VWEE9G7BYJ4M1CKF2J?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1
My preferred bracket. It is meant to hold two SSDs but that means they are VERY close together. For practical purposes, you need one of the SATA cables to be a right angle and one to be a straight. Other than that, its awesome. I have used them in 5 different builds.
LOL I found it last year in a post in the sysadmin sub. Which I can no longer find, of course. On Amazon it's an iodd Iodd2531. It's just an enclosure that you put a 2.5" drive into, and then you can add ISOs to the drive in a special way. Once set up, it has a small screen so you can boot to any ISO that you've installed. The enclosure is about $60, and you need the drive separate, but it has a lot of functionality for me.
as everybody already said, you likely don't have two HDD slots (unless you happen to have a CD drive on your laptop...in which case it still depends, but SOMETIMES you can put a HD in that slot).
However, you can buy an external case for your existing HD and run it as an external drive.
You can buy adapters off Amazon for like $15 bucks:
This is the one I have, works well
I bought 1 already but want another. I'm new to this, so after shucking where can I place them? My only computer is a laptop so my options are either building my own server or finding a dock that can support multiple 8TB drives, preferably 4 ports. Can someone gimme an amazon link for something to look at?
I was thinking this https://www.amazon.com/Mediasonic-ProBox-HF2-SU3S2-SATA-Enclosure/dp/B003X26VV4/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1503137746&sr=8-3&keywords=4+bay+8tb
But won't that not support plex transcoding?
fyi this is a sata m.2, not a nvme drive so you can just get a cheap enclosure and put it in that to use with a normal sata cable
You mean the enclosure? Yeah here's just the first result on amazon
I'm not sure why the speed is higher. My speeds are from Linux dd command piped to /dev/zero.
I couldn't test the MX500 because I returned it to buy the Western Digital -- the MX500 had 3 sectors bad from the factory and I wasn't having it for ~$600.
I got a PNY 240GB SSD and just a basic External SSD enclosure, both from my local Best Buy. The enclosure was pretty cheap and i could have probably found it even cheaper on amazon or something but i didn’t want to wait for shipping.
Also: Microsoft says that the Xbox one requires the external drive to be 256GB or more to work, but it’s not true. Like i said, mines a 240GB and it works just fine. At Best Buy, the 240GB was $70 and the 480GB was $130, so it just depends on how much you want to pay.
Edit: I paid like $25 at Best Buy on my enclosure but here’s one on amazon for $10 link
I've been using an Icydock bay that fits 6x 2.5" drives into a single 5.25" bay - happy with that one. Just bought this Rosewill one for 3.5" drives that people seem to like - haven't used it yet though: https://www.amazon.com/Rosewill-5-25-Inch-3-5-Inch-Hot-swap-SATAIII/dp/B00DGZ42SM
The Icydock 3.5" ones are $93 and $133 on Amazon, but do hold 5 drives instead of the Rosewill's 4. There is also this external one, ugly but pretty cheap and you can stack two: https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16816111045
Yes, you can do exactly that. You can also get a USB enclosure like this to turn the old drive into a convenient external drive.
Most M.2 USB enclosures won't do both SATA and NVME, make sure you get the right one for your SSD. I bought this one which does do both: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08RVC6F9Y?psc=1&ref=ppx\_yo2\_dt\_b\_product\_details
Man, I'd rather spend the extra $10 and get Sabrent's enclosure. They make solid drives, so I'd imagine they can make a decent enclosure that also doesn't look like it's out of the 90s.
Looks like NewEgg and Amazon both have them. Literally looked for "M.2 to 2.5 caddie" on Google and this was the first amazon answer.
you need thing like this one: https://www.amazon.ca/Sabrent-2-5-Inch-Aluminum-Enclosure-EC-M2SA/dp/B01N6PMZLW/ref=sr_1_4?dchild=1&keywords=sata+m.2+to+pcie&qid=1617135583&s=electronics&sr=1-4
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your m.2 ssd is SATA SSD, the adapter you bought only work for NVME SSD.
Are you planning on keeping your current 1 TB 3.5" in the x51 along with the other two 2.5" drives? This will have you at capacity as there are only 3 SATA ports on the x51 motherboard, you won't be able to use the CD drive. The best answer I can give you on that is to find an adapter that'll slide into the 3.5" bay that allows for a 2.5" drive to be held in its place (something like this which actually supports two 2.5" drives in place of one 3.5" drive. Keep in mind I can't confirm if this works, just a suggestion!) Another choice would be that you could mount the 2.5" drives on the existing 3.5" HDD or somewhere else in the case. The problem you run into is that there isn't a lot of space and the case is hot, so keep that in mind before making any firm decisions.
You might can try to get a 330w PSU from eBay in your country or ordering straight from Dell. The part numbers you should search for are: Y90RR / 5X3NX / F0K0N / XM3C3 / 331-2429. Keep in mind the 330w PSU can be listed as an M18x laptop charger, but as long as you can confirm one of the part numbers above you should be good. I could be wrong, but I think you can sometimes buy from a different country's Amazon store and get it shipped internationally, so you might want to check into that as the US Amazon store has the 330w PSU listed.
The problem with CPU coolers in the x51 is that there is a cup that sits on top of the cooler which angles the air out of the case so your case doesn't get hot. I'm sure it'll function fine with a good enough cooler but you might not see much lower temps without it (in theory). This thread on the Dell website seems to have a lot of good information that might help you out.
Sure. There's plenty of disk bays that connect to the PC via USB 3 or esata. I have a Drobo, which has served me well, but my next purchase will likely be something cheaper than that. I've been running it nearly 24/7 since I bought it 4 years ago (there was a month or two when my PC was off, so the drobo was in sleep mode).
There's a wide range of things like that available. Just search 5 Bay enclosure or 5 hdd Bay on Amazon (I'm on my phone or else I'd link you).
Edit: Mediasonic ProBox HF2-SU3S2 4 Bay 3.5" SATA HDD Enclosure - USB 3.0 & eSATA Support SATA 3 6.0Gbps HDD transfer speed https://www.amazon.com/dp/B003X26VV4/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_E62LybZ817YQM
That's a 4 bay drive for 99 dollars. But just FYI, I don't know much about what hardware is good or reliable for USB drives (or Nas for that matter). It's something I plan to figure out or ask about when I get the money to buy a new enclosure or Nas.
And it should be noted that while I've had a good experience with Drobo (it's super easy to use, you can swap out drives for larger ones when you need to, and it can protect against one or two simultaneous drive failures), they use a proprietary RAID. That means if your drobo enclosure dies, you'll need to get it fixed, or replace it with another Drobo before you can recover the data on your hdds. I've read thaf migrating from one drobo to another is easy, and you don't need to know which order your drives are in or anything like that.
Rosewill actually sells the cages by themselves on amazon here. If you bought the non-hotswappable one and decided to buy the 3 cages later you'd currently spend an extra $20 dollars then just buying the hotswappable rosewill chassis which isn't really that bad. But you do have to remember you will lose 3 drive spaces since the non-hotswappable has a total of 15 and the hot-swappable has a total of 12 drive slots.
Ultimately what I've done because I really didn't know what I wanted to do is use old computer parts for my current server and put that in my Rosewill chassis. Recently I've just bought new (used) server grade components and the next thing I'll do is switch to better bigger chassis after I fill up my current one which won't be any time soon for me.
I also recommend r/JDM_WAAAT he has really good (cheap-pricey) server builds if you don't know what you want to do.
Here's a "review" of the non-hotswap chassis so you can get more insight into it.
Whut? No it's just common thought. You're more likely to bitch to the internet if you have a bad experience rather than a good. Keyboard warriors 101.
If it's an external hard drive:
Enclosure (literally plug and play)
Internal: WD Drive , 5400 because 7200 tend to heat up faster and the PS4 is loud enough.
They should fit ant 5.25 slot. I have 3 in a rosewill case. They have little metal bars for the sides so not sure how they'll lock in.
Cheaper here https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DGZ42SM/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_oSyxFbA2CRJ1W