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bkleenex 02-14-2013 06:33 AM

HDD for laptop
 
I am almost computer stupid, but I know a little....
My hard drive died- my BIL was able to transfer all the data by taking it out and hooking it up to my external.
So... I need a new HDD

I have a HP Probook 4525s XT950UT 15.6" LED Notebook (2.2 GHz AMD Athlon II Dual-Core Processor P340, 2 GB RAM, 320 GB 7200 rpm Hard Drive, DVD+/-RW SuperMulti DL LightScribe, Windows 7 Professional 32-bit)

The current broken HDD is: Hitachi 7K500-320

Do I buy the exact same one? Or do I buy different brand or what? I use the computer for deals, photo editing, that sort of stuff, some online gaming but not much. I found this current drive on amazon for around 49.99..... I just don't want to get something that isn't compatable or too much/too little for me...

Thanks for all the help...

dhc014 02-14-2013 07:22 AM

I would NOT recommend buying the exact drive that you had before since it is obsolete.

You can use pretty much any 2.5" SATA hard drive, but I would suggest going with a Solid State Drive (SSD) instead. A 2.5" SATA SSD has the same form factor and uses the same interface, but operates at much faster speeds than mechanical hard drives. This will provide a noticeable improvement in performance.

You will probably have to give up some storage capacity though. 120GB - 256GB SSDs are currently the best value, anything larger will cost a lot of money and anything smaller doesn't save much money.

You could also go with this deal to get a blend of large capacity with improved performance:
Seagate 750GB Momentus XT Hybrid Hard Drive $99@NCIX

bkleenex 02-14-2013 08:02 AM

Anything good for about half that price?

dhc014 02-14-2013 12:18 PM

If the old drive works in an external enclosure, why wouldn't it work in the laptop?

Is the Windows installation corrupted preventing it from booting? Why not just reinstall Windows since you would have to do that with a new drive anyways?

or

TOSHIBA MQ01ABD032 320GB 5400 RPM 8MB Cache 2.5" SATA 3.0Gb/s Internal Notebook Hard Drive -Bare Drive [newegg.com] - $50
SAMSUNG Spinpoint M8 ST320LM001 320GB 5400 RPM 8MB Cache 2.5" SATA 3.0Gb/s Internal Notebook Hard Drive [newegg.com] - $50

bkleenex 02-15-2013 02:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dhc014 (Post 57580750)
If the old drive works in an external enclosure, why wouldn't it work in the laptop?

Is the Windows installation corrupted preventing it from booting? Why not just reinstall Windows since you would have to do that with a new drive anyways?

or

TOSHIBA MQ01ABD032 320GB 5400 RPM 8MB Cache 2.5" SATA 3.0Gb/s Internal Notebook Hard Drive -Bare Drive [newegg.com] - $50
SAMSUNG Spinpoint M8 ST320LM001 320GB 5400 RPM 8MB Cache 2.5" SATA 3.0Gb/s Internal Notebook Hard Drive [newegg.com] - $50

The old drive doesn't "work". The laptop won't boot. Started with a startup disc drive error, but would startup and freeze. Then wouldn't start up at all, could only access the boot menu.... Ran diagnostics and got a hard disc drive failed error. over and over and over. So we took it out and hooked it up to the desktop and transferred the data to the external. Its not working, we were just able to recover most of the stuff off it. If I'm having issues with it right now- do I really want to take the chance that it will happen again?

these are 5400 rpm- mines 7200 won't it be slower or will I even notice? And how/where do I find out if they are compatible with my computer?
Thanks for the links!

dhc014 02-15-2013 05:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bkleenex (Post 57594590)
The old drive doesn't "work". The laptop won't boot. Started with a startup disc drive error, but would startup and freeze. Then wouldn't start up at all, could only access the boot menu.... Ran diagnostics and got a hard disc drive failed error. over and over and over. So we took it out and hooked it up to the desktop and transferred the data to the external. Its not working, we were just able to recover most of the stuff off it. If I'm having issues with it right now- do I really want to take the chance that it will happen again?

these are 5400 rpm- mines 7200 won't it be slower or will I even notice? And how/where do I find out if they are compatible with my computer?
Thanks for the links!

You can spend a bit more to get a 7200RPM drive if you want, but if performance is important to you, then you should get a SSD.

Any 2.5" SATA SSD should work in your computer. Your current drive is 9.5mm in height (the most common), so you aren't restricted to the smaller 7mm thick drives but you might not want to take a chance on some of the high capacity, thicker drives.

mc2157 02-15-2013 07:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dhc014 (Post 57596176)
You can spend a bit more to get a 7200RPM drive if you want, but if performance is important to you, then you should get a SSD.

This.

If you're not really an intensive PC user (i.e. you don't game, really just check your emails, maybe play basic games like chess) then capacity shouldn't be a concern at all for you. As such, performance is always worth the trade off in these cases.

Watch newegg.com and tigerdirect for a sale on a SSD drive for under $100, they happen fairly often (usually $80-$90). You may only get around 100gb of space after installation, but you won't really care if you don't save giant files like movies and games.

Plug that into your laptop and watch it fly.

godealgo 02-19-2013 05:57 PM

Stick with 7200 rpm
 
Here's a 1tb under $80.

http://m.slickdeals.net/f/5863878...HPHOTO-COM


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