Tech Support > Computer Hardware > Laptops/Notebooks > DELL Laptop/Harddrive Power Compatibility
DELL Laptop/Harddrive Power Compatibility
Posted by Crazy Horse on October 18th, 2005


Greetings.

To move data from my old harddrive to my new one, I want to put my old
harddrive inside a (borrowed) DELL Inspiron 8600, and copy files from my
old drive to my new one, residing in my Inspiron 1000.* From the 8600,
I've removed its Toshiba harddrive that has a power specification of
5V/0.7A. My old harddrive (a Hitachi, which I want to put inside the
8600) has a power spec of 5V/1.0A.

So the question is this: will doing this cause any harm to either the
Inspiron 8600 (which came with a 5V/0.7A HDD) or to the 5V/1.0A Hitachi
HDD that came with my Inspiron 1000?

Any help you can provide will be much appreciated.

BTW, I've contacted a tech-service guy at CompUSA and he told me there
should be no problem, but I thought I'd run this by some newsgroup
folks, just to be on the safe side.

Thanks.
--
_______
-CH
ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ
* I'll do this via a temporary LAN connection.

** And BTW, I'm going through this procedure to try to recover data from
my old drive and get it onto my new one. The old drive's bootable
partition became UNbootable... So I'm in the process of rebuilding the
software on my new drive. It's a drag... and I know there must be a
better approach (to be used in the future)... but that's another topic
for another post... perhaps to another newsgroup.

Posted by Rod Speed on October 18th, 2005


Crazy Horse <nospam@all.is.best> wrote

Should be fine, the power demand generally goes up
a bit with larger drives. It may well be the same as
the biggest drive that was available for that laptop.

The power supply wont be that marginal.

He's right.

This newsgroup is fine for that. The best approach to use in the future
is to image the drive and just restore from the image if that is required.



Posted by bxf on October 19th, 2005



Crazy Horse wrote:
about connections. Still, I can't help but wonder if I'm understanding
your intentions. So, for my benefit, if nothing else:

You are going to take your old drive (originally from your Inspiron
1000) and put it into a borrowed 8600. And then what? You are going to
boot the 8600? That is not likely to work very well, if at all,
ESPECIALLY since you say your old drive has become unbootable. I think
I must be missing something here. And then what, connect the 8600 to
the 1000?

Unless I'm really failing to understand your plan, I would think it is
simpler to put the old drive in an external case and connect it to the
machine you want to copy the files to (the 1000). Simple.


Posted by Rod Speed on October 19th, 2005


bxf <bill@topman.net> wrote:
It is a viable approach if you use a bootable CD with
Bart PE or knoppix etc on it to just get access to the
non bootable drive to copy files from the original drive.



Posted by bxf on October 20th, 2005



Rod Speed wrote:
And do any of these enable you to connect the 8600 (old disk, source of
COPY) to the 1000 (new disk, target of COPY)?


Posted by Rod Speed on October 20th, 2005


bxf <bill@topman.net> wrote
You can certainly copy data between them, thats what he wasnt to do.



Posted by bxf on October 21st, 2005



Rod Speed wrote:
Just for my benefit, how does one do that? I can imagine networking
them, for example, but can this be done if you can't boot Windows
(unless PE is enogh for this purpose, I suppose)? I'd expect it must be
something simpler than that though, but I don't know what it is.


Posted by Jeremy Boden on October 21st, 2005


In message <1129892051.587524.232760@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups .com>, bxf
<bill@topman.net> writes
those accessible to Windows). With the exception (?) of NTFS it can also
write to them.

--
Jeremy Boden

Posted by Rod Speed on October 21st, 2005


bxf <bill@topman.net> wrote
Any of the usual ways you can between any networked PCs.

Obviously the detail is different with knoppix than Bart PE etc.

Yes, that is clearly what he wants to do.

Yes, that is the whole point of PE, it gives you all the
functionality you need to do that when booted from CD.

So does knoppix, its a full linux booted from CD.

Nope, that's what it is, a full modern OS, booted from CD.
The use of a full modern OS makes network ops effortless.

You can do it from DOS, but that is
much more awkward with networking.




Posted by bxf on October 21st, 2005



Jeremy Boden wrote:
Thanks for the info, Jeremy. Never used Linux - yet, and never had a
need to do any home networking, either, which is why I'm asking these
basic qustions.


Posted by bxf on October 21st, 2005



Rod Speed wrote:
Good to know. May come in handy at some future time.

I still say sticking the disk in a $10 USB box is easier...:-)


Posted by Rod Speed on October 21st, 2005


bxf <bill@topman.net> wrote:
Not when you already have the two laptops.




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