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Previously on "Upgrading laptop to use an SSD and HDD"

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  • The Spartan
    replied
    For those who are looking for a good deal on a 480GB SSD Seagate 600 Series 480GB 2.5inch SATA-III SSD | Ebuyer.com

    Leave a comment:


  • doodab
    replied
    Something else to bear in mind with SSDs is that due to the internal multiplexing of flash chips across channels larger ones tend to be faster, up to a point. With the latest drives using bigger NAND devices peak performance is found in the 500GB and above models.

    AnandTech | The Crucial/Micron M500 Review (960GB, 480GB, 240GB, 120GB)

    AnandTech | Samsung SSD 840 EVO Review: 120GB, 250GB, 500GB, 750GB & 1TB Models Tested

    Leave a comment:


  • SimonMac
    replied
    Isn't this what Apple does with their fusion drives?

    Leave a comment:


  • Platypus
    replied
    Originally posted by Spacecadet View Post
    ^ I want one !!!!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    According to the Amazon review here:
    http://www.amazon.co.uk/Black2-2-5-i...=WD1001X06XDTL
    it is actually 2 seperate physical drives and will present itself as such to the OS

    Or you could just get a 1TB SSD
    http://www.amazon.co.uk/Samsung-Basi...ywords=1tb+ssd

    Leave a comment:


  • kevpuk
    replied
    Bit zippier than a regular HDD, and certainly a good solution if you can't have 2 separate drives

    Leave a comment:


  • BoredBloke
    replied
    Are these any good?

    Western Digital WD1001X06XDTL Black2 1TB HDD 120GB SSD (SSHD) Dual Drive 2.5" SATA 3 - Scan.co.uk

    Leave a comment:


  • The Spartan
    replied
    I went with the Crucial M500 240GB and then ordered a HDD caddy from HDD Caddy – Add a 2nd HDD to your laptop and also a dvd drive caddy from ebay, so I'm just twiddling my thumbs waiting for it to arrive.

    Leave a comment:


  • kevpuk
    replied
    In general, any sort of SSD will be a marked improvement on a mechanical HDD.
    My previous laptop had a small cache SSD (20GB) to support the HDD, which helped but was nowhere near as zippy as pure SSD. When MyCo bought latest laptop, I went to the opposite end of the spectrum - 2x SSD (mSata 128GB) in RAID 0, along with a 1TB mechanical HDD. The BluRay burner can also be removed to allow an additional 2.5" SSD or HDD, but I kinda like the drive in place
    Of course, it is horses for courses - currently, I need to use the laptop at ClientCo, to run a Virtual Machine to access their network - speedy drives and a pile of RAM (16GB) make this a smooth experience.

    Leave a comment:


  • The Spartan
    replied
    Originally posted by Spacecadet View Post
    Just to add my tuppence

    I did this with my last laptop (Dell Precision M65)- 256GB SSD and a 1TB HDD in what was the optical bay.
    I used these for the HDD enclosure guys:
    NewmodeUS, Hard Drive Caddys for Notebooks

    Can't say I ever really missed the optical drive

    New laptop (Dell XPS 15 L541) now has 2 SSDs but still has the optical drive
    I've got one of these fitted:
    Plextor PX-256M5M 256GB M5M Series mSATA
    I had to do a bit of fiddling with the BIOS to change the boot order but it will now dual boot Windows and Linux from that drive

    The main drive is one of these:
    Samsung 840 Series Pro 512GB
    But is a now a non-bootable data drive accessible to both OSs

    I'd recommend checking to see if you can fit the small form factor SSD into your laptop. If you can then why not!
    Magic thanks for the links I'm thinking of getting the 240GB Crucial m500 as 100 quid it seems like it's exactly what I need and if I can get a decent caddy for my HP DV6 all the better. Whilst I did consider buying a new laptop initially I find that the laptop I have is more than capable for programming I do so it'd be a waste of money.

    Leave a comment:


  • doodab
    replied
    Originally posted by Spacecadet View Post
    Just to add my tuppence

    I did this with my last laptop (Dell Precision M65)- 256GB SSD and a 1TB HDD in what was the optical bay.
    I used these for the HDD enclosure guys:
    NewmodeUS, Hard Drive Caddys for Notebooks

    Can't say I ever really missed the optical drive

    New laptop (Dell XPS 15 L541) now has 2 SSDs but still has the optical drive
    I've got one of these fitted:
    Plextor PX-256M5M 256GB M5M Series mSATA
    I had to do a bit of fiddling with the BIOS to change the boot order but it will now dual boot Windows and Linux from that drive

    The main drive is one of these:
    Samsung 840 Series Pro 512GB
    But is a now a non-bootable data drive accessible to both OSs

    I'd recommend checking to see if you can fit the small form factor SSD into your laptop. If you can then why not!
    One thing with the mSATA drives is that the interface is usually SATA 2 so if you want ultimate speed your better off booting from the main drive and using the mSATA one for data. Although you aren't really going to notice the difference IMO.

    Leave a comment:


  • Spacecadet
    replied
    Just to add my tuppence

    I did this with my last laptop (Dell Precision M65)- 256GB SSD and a 1TB HDD in what was the optical bay.
    I used these for the HDD enclosure guys:
    NewmodeUS, Hard Drive Caddys for Notebooks

    Can't say I ever really missed the optical drive

    New laptop (Dell XPS 15 L541) now has 2 SSDs but still has the optical drive
    I've got one of these fitted:
    Plextor PX-256M5M 256GB M5M Series mSATA
    I had to do a bit of fiddling with the BIOS to change the boot order but it will now dual boot Windows and Linux from that drive

    The main drive is one of these:
    Samsung 840 Series Pro 512GB
    But is a now a non-bootable data drive accessible to both OSs

    I'd recommend checking to see if you can fit the small form factor SSD into your laptop. If you can then why not!

    Leave a comment:


  • anonymouse
    replied
    I've got OCZ (64GB) in the media player and the laptop(128GB), with Kingston in the touch book (128GB). No problems with the OCZ, but the touch book has to be 7mm and won't boot with Crucial. It got swapped with Kingston and now works fine, got the RMA from Crucial and sent it back for a refund. I reused the 500gb hdd as I use 3tb on USB 3.0 for storage.

    Price for SSD, about £65 for 128GB, upwards then whatever you want to pay.

    Laptop has the optical drive replaced with this:- convert your optical notebook Bay into a HDD bay AKASA AK-OA2SSA-BK - SATA Version - Scan.co.uk

    Optical drive got dumped into this :- Laptop USB To SATA CD DVD Combo RW Rom Drive External Case Cover Caddy Enclosure | eBay

    There's an issue with True Image and others not liking GPT drives and Windoze 8.1, but this worked for me (20% off coupon) :- Paragon Migrate OS to SSD 4.0 (PC) 20% Discount Download Coupon Code

    Otherwise, freebies :- Free Disk Copy, Disk Clone Software download to Clone Hard Drive - EaseUS Disk Copy Freeware

    Leave a comment:


  • doodab
    replied
    Originally posted by The Spartan View Post
    I'm guessing SSD's are a lot more reliable these days than previously and seeing as I tend to backup everything up it's worth taking a punt, btw where did you get your USB caddy for the HDD from? and for SSD is there any particular brand you'd recommend?
    For SSD I've tended to stick with people who actually make flash chips, so Intel, Crucial / Micron & Samsung. I've got all three (actually I've got 2 intels and 2 crucial/micron ones) and a Plextor one and I've had no problems with any of them.

    The USB caddy I bought from a shop in Munich, but it's one of these:

    Icy Box IB-290StUS-B 2.5" SATA HDD to USB + eSATA, Ext caddy - Scan.co.uk

    the eSATA being a bit quicker but it still needs a USB port to power it.

    Leave a comment:


  • The Spartan
    replied
    Originally posted by doodab View Post
    I did it with my old Lenovo for a bit. In the end I put the optical drive back in and bought a USB caddy for the HDD.

    TBH I would splash the extra cash and go for a giant SSD instead, you can get 1TB ones now.
    I'm guessing SSD's are a lot more reliable these days than previously and seeing as I tend to backup everything up it's worth taking a punt, btw where did you get your USB caddy for the HDD from? and for SSD is there any particular brand you'd recommend?

    Leave a comment:

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