Introducción
Existen muchos beneficios al agregar un Disco Duro adicional a su laptop como lo son: mejor velocidad, mayor espacio para guardar archivos y menos dolor de cabeza al instalar programas nuevos. Use esta guía para instalar uno usando nuestra bahía óptica para segundo disco duro.
Qué necesitas
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Extrae los siguientes diez tornillos:
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Tres tornillos Phillips #00 de 14.4 mm
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Tres tornillos Phillips #00 de 3.5 mm
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Cuatro tornillos de resalto Phillips #00 de 3.5 mm
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Usa el borde de un spudger para levantar el conector de la batería haciendo palanca para extraer su toma de corriente de la placa madre.
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Usa el lado plano del spudger para hacer palanca y extraer el cable plano del conector con la placa madre correspondiente al AirPort/Bluetooth.
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Tira del cable de la unidad óptica lejos de la unidad óptica.
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Retira los dos tornillos Phillips #0 negros que fijan el pequeño soporte de montaje metálico. Transfiere este soporte a su nueva unidad óptica o gabinete de disco duro.
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Retira el separador de plástico de la bahía del disco óptico presionando los cierres a cada lado, levántalo y sácalo de la bahía.
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Asegúrate de que los conectores del disco duro miran hacia abajo antes de colocarlo en el hueco de la bahía.
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Coloca con cuidado el disco duro en el hueco insertándolo en la ranura.
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Mientras sujetas la bahía con una mano, presiona el disco duro con la otra mano para insertarlo en los conectores.
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Para ensamblar de nuevo el dispositivo, sigue los pasos de esta guía en orden inverso.
Para ensamblar de nuevo el dispositivo, sigue los pasos de esta guía en orden inverso.
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8 comentarios
I skipped the steps 6-11 minus just removing two of the screws on the Airport/ Bluetooth assembly and my installation was flawless. I had prior experience removing my Superdrive and there is enough wiggle room for you to pull out the Superdrive drive without damaging any cords or plugs that others seemed to damage. Also, my suggestion is that you clone your hard drive to the SSD and install the SSD in the original hard drive location. I installed the hdd in the Apple Drive Caddy. My computer ran awesome before with a SSD but now I have 500gb for space.
I did replaced my drive by a SSD really quickly ! However, since I've done that, my CPU goes crazy sometimes and the fans as well... I tried to install SSD Fan Control but it doesn't seems to work... Any solution ?
I upgraded my MacBook Pro early 2011 this weekend with a Samsung 850 Pro 512GB. I followed one of the many online guides that talk about Carboncopy to copy your configuration on your HHD to your new drive and then you just have to swap them.
After I did this, I noticed that the fan started to blow for anything that I started. Just opening a webpage was enough. I cleaned the fan and indeed found a bunch of dust collected behind the exhaust of the fan. That must be it, I thought. But after starting my computer, it started the fan again quite soon.
Then I restarted my macbook via the old HDD on usb. Silence as I was used to before.. no fan going nuts on anything I started. So I created a bootable USB stick for a clean install. I have not heard the fan ever since. Only in cases that are normal because it requests more of my MacBook.
I did it exactly as shown. Put a new SSD as primary drive, restored de backup, but can't access the HDD (the original, that I put as secondary, for file store). The HDD works fine with the SATA-USB cable, but not at the optical slot. What should I do now?