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Don't know what I’m looking for regarding removable HDDs?
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Ok all. So I’m a gamer and haven’t built my own system since the 90s. I’ve always had a backup USB HDD in case I run into issues and have to format. I’m looking to have a bay for a HDD that I can remove and put in a different one, kind of like unplugging a external HDD and plugging in a new one.
Currently two of my bays are for optical drives (although one isn’t showing in my list below). I don't know if what I’m looking for even exists or if it has to do with some server tech but I am looking for something that’s compatible with my system.
backup external-hard-drive removable
New contributor
add a comment |
Ok all. So I’m a gamer and haven’t built my own system since the 90s. I’ve always had a backup USB HDD in case I run into issues and have to format. I’m looking to have a bay for a HDD that I can remove and put in a different one, kind of like unplugging a external HDD and plugging in a new one.
Currently two of my bays are for optical drives (although one isn’t showing in my list below). I don't know if what I’m looking for even exists or if it has to do with some server tech but I am looking for something that’s compatible with my system.
backup external-hard-drive removable
New contributor
1
If you just have an occasional need to plug in a hard drive one of the new USB Hard drive Docks work well and can just sit on your desk.
– JPhi1618
yesterday
add a comment |
Ok all. So I’m a gamer and haven’t built my own system since the 90s. I’ve always had a backup USB HDD in case I run into issues and have to format. I’m looking to have a bay for a HDD that I can remove and put in a different one, kind of like unplugging a external HDD and plugging in a new one.
Currently two of my bays are for optical drives (although one isn’t showing in my list below). I don't know if what I’m looking for even exists or if it has to do with some server tech but I am looking for something that’s compatible with my system.
backup external-hard-drive removable
New contributor
Ok all. So I’m a gamer and haven’t built my own system since the 90s. I’ve always had a backup USB HDD in case I run into issues and have to format. I’m looking to have a bay for a HDD that I can remove and put in a different one, kind of like unplugging a external HDD and plugging in a new one.
Currently two of my bays are for optical drives (although one isn’t showing in my list below). I don't know if what I’m looking for even exists or if it has to do with some server tech but I am looking for something that’s compatible with my system.
backup external-hard-drive removable
backup external-hard-drive removable
New contributor
New contributor
edited yesterday
Run5k
11.3k73152
11.3k73152
New contributor
asked yesterday
Wizardhood2003Wizardhood2003
362
362
New contributor
New contributor
1
If you just have an occasional need to plug in a hard drive one of the new USB Hard drive Docks work well and can just sit on your desk.
– JPhi1618
yesterday
add a comment |
1
If you just have an occasional need to plug in a hard drive one of the new USB Hard drive Docks work well and can just sit on your desk.
– JPhi1618
yesterday
1
1
If you just have an occasional need to plug in a hard drive one of the new USB Hard drive Docks work well and can just sit on your desk.
– JPhi1618
yesterday
If you just have an occasional need to plug in a hard drive one of the new USB Hard drive Docks work well and can just sit on your desk.
– JPhi1618
yesterday
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Sounds like what you are after is a hot-swap bay.
They make different flavors depending on if you want to use 3.5 inch drives or 2.5 inch drives. Here is one for two 2.5 inch drives that will fit in the 5.25 inch standard optical drive bay.
If you want one for 3.5 inch drives, they are available too.
Just make sure that the HD is protected from static, water, and physical knocks. USB enclosures usually do the job well, but if you have a safe place for the HD, the hot swap bay is fine. There are also hard drive docks, which are like hot swap bays in a standalone USB device.
– Christopher Hostage
yesterday
1
@ChristopherHostage you may be able to find enclosed trays that give all around protection. We had them for 3.5" drives at my previous job (drives were being pulled and locked in a safe nightly so they needed to be well protected); but they were bought something like a decade ago and I couldn't find an example quickly today.
– Dan Neely
yesterday
3
@DanNeely I've found one example: Startech hot-swap-hard-drive-bay-usb-enclosure. Must now try to resist gadget purchase.
– Andrew Morton
yesterday
2
The photo appears to depict a device that fits in a 3.5" floppy bay, not the stated 5.25" optical drive bay.
– ScottJ
yesterday
1
I've used removable drive bays (for 5.25" HDD drives). The ones I'm familiar with have simple connectors built in to the mating parts. I wouldn't trust such a setup for an actual "hot" swap; I always did swaps with the machine powered down. If you want to do hot swaps, make sure the device is advertised for that capability (power/ground and signal connections should mate progressively)
– Zenilogix
yesterday
|
show 4 more comments
As noted by in another answer to this question, what you are (likely) looking for is called a "hot swap(pable) hard drive bay".
Hot swapping is intended to allow replacement of failed hard drivers without powering off a device. As a consequence, hot swapping a hard drives often mean being able to remove it from the front of the machine. There are inserts that allow for this via standard-sized drive bays (i.e. the hard drive sits in a tray/cage inside this bay).
1
Effectively a feature of SOHO NAS for a while (Sata). It helps to know which disk has failed if this is for RAID6 too.
– mckenzm
yesterday
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Sounds like what you are after is a hot-swap bay.
They make different flavors depending on if you want to use 3.5 inch drives or 2.5 inch drives. Here is one for two 2.5 inch drives that will fit in the 5.25 inch standard optical drive bay.
If you want one for 3.5 inch drives, they are available too.
Just make sure that the HD is protected from static, water, and physical knocks. USB enclosures usually do the job well, but if you have a safe place for the HD, the hot swap bay is fine. There are also hard drive docks, which are like hot swap bays in a standalone USB device.
– Christopher Hostage
yesterday
1
@ChristopherHostage you may be able to find enclosed trays that give all around protection. We had them for 3.5" drives at my previous job (drives were being pulled and locked in a safe nightly so they needed to be well protected); but they were bought something like a decade ago and I couldn't find an example quickly today.
– Dan Neely
yesterday
3
@DanNeely I've found one example: Startech hot-swap-hard-drive-bay-usb-enclosure. Must now try to resist gadget purchase.
– Andrew Morton
yesterday
2
The photo appears to depict a device that fits in a 3.5" floppy bay, not the stated 5.25" optical drive bay.
– ScottJ
yesterday
1
I've used removable drive bays (for 5.25" HDD drives). The ones I'm familiar with have simple connectors built in to the mating parts. I wouldn't trust such a setup for an actual "hot" swap; I always did swaps with the machine powered down. If you want to do hot swaps, make sure the device is advertised for that capability (power/ground and signal connections should mate progressively)
– Zenilogix
yesterday
|
show 4 more comments
Sounds like what you are after is a hot-swap bay.
They make different flavors depending on if you want to use 3.5 inch drives or 2.5 inch drives. Here is one for two 2.5 inch drives that will fit in the 5.25 inch standard optical drive bay.
If you want one for 3.5 inch drives, they are available too.
Just make sure that the HD is protected from static, water, and physical knocks. USB enclosures usually do the job well, but if you have a safe place for the HD, the hot swap bay is fine. There are also hard drive docks, which are like hot swap bays in a standalone USB device.
– Christopher Hostage
yesterday
1
@ChristopherHostage you may be able to find enclosed trays that give all around protection. We had them for 3.5" drives at my previous job (drives were being pulled and locked in a safe nightly so they needed to be well protected); but they were bought something like a decade ago and I couldn't find an example quickly today.
– Dan Neely
yesterday
3
@DanNeely I've found one example: Startech hot-swap-hard-drive-bay-usb-enclosure. Must now try to resist gadget purchase.
– Andrew Morton
yesterday
2
The photo appears to depict a device that fits in a 3.5" floppy bay, not the stated 5.25" optical drive bay.
– ScottJ
yesterday
1
I've used removable drive bays (for 5.25" HDD drives). The ones I'm familiar with have simple connectors built in to the mating parts. I wouldn't trust such a setup for an actual "hot" swap; I always did swaps with the machine powered down. If you want to do hot swaps, make sure the device is advertised for that capability (power/ground and signal connections should mate progressively)
– Zenilogix
yesterday
|
show 4 more comments
Sounds like what you are after is a hot-swap bay.
They make different flavors depending on if you want to use 3.5 inch drives or 2.5 inch drives. Here is one for two 2.5 inch drives that will fit in the 5.25 inch standard optical drive bay.
If you want one for 3.5 inch drives, they are available too.
Sounds like what you are after is a hot-swap bay.
They make different flavors depending on if you want to use 3.5 inch drives or 2.5 inch drives. Here is one for two 2.5 inch drives that will fit in the 5.25 inch standard optical drive bay.
If you want one for 3.5 inch drives, they are available too.
answered yesterday
Eddie DunnEddie Dunn
56626
56626
Just make sure that the HD is protected from static, water, and physical knocks. USB enclosures usually do the job well, but if you have a safe place for the HD, the hot swap bay is fine. There are also hard drive docks, which are like hot swap bays in a standalone USB device.
– Christopher Hostage
yesterday
1
@ChristopherHostage you may be able to find enclosed trays that give all around protection. We had them for 3.5" drives at my previous job (drives were being pulled and locked in a safe nightly so they needed to be well protected); but they were bought something like a decade ago and I couldn't find an example quickly today.
– Dan Neely
yesterday
3
@DanNeely I've found one example: Startech hot-swap-hard-drive-bay-usb-enclosure. Must now try to resist gadget purchase.
– Andrew Morton
yesterday
2
The photo appears to depict a device that fits in a 3.5" floppy bay, not the stated 5.25" optical drive bay.
– ScottJ
yesterday
1
I've used removable drive bays (for 5.25" HDD drives). The ones I'm familiar with have simple connectors built in to the mating parts. I wouldn't trust such a setup for an actual "hot" swap; I always did swaps with the machine powered down. If you want to do hot swaps, make sure the device is advertised for that capability (power/ground and signal connections should mate progressively)
– Zenilogix
yesterday
|
show 4 more comments
Just make sure that the HD is protected from static, water, and physical knocks. USB enclosures usually do the job well, but if you have a safe place for the HD, the hot swap bay is fine. There are also hard drive docks, which are like hot swap bays in a standalone USB device.
– Christopher Hostage
yesterday
1
@ChristopherHostage you may be able to find enclosed trays that give all around protection. We had them for 3.5" drives at my previous job (drives were being pulled and locked in a safe nightly so they needed to be well protected); but they were bought something like a decade ago and I couldn't find an example quickly today.
– Dan Neely
yesterday
3
@DanNeely I've found one example: Startech hot-swap-hard-drive-bay-usb-enclosure. Must now try to resist gadget purchase.
– Andrew Morton
yesterday
2
The photo appears to depict a device that fits in a 3.5" floppy bay, not the stated 5.25" optical drive bay.
– ScottJ
yesterday
1
I've used removable drive bays (for 5.25" HDD drives). The ones I'm familiar with have simple connectors built in to the mating parts. I wouldn't trust such a setup for an actual "hot" swap; I always did swaps with the machine powered down. If you want to do hot swaps, make sure the device is advertised for that capability (power/ground and signal connections should mate progressively)
– Zenilogix
yesterday
Just make sure that the HD is protected from static, water, and physical knocks. USB enclosures usually do the job well, but if you have a safe place for the HD, the hot swap bay is fine. There are also hard drive docks, which are like hot swap bays in a standalone USB device.
– Christopher Hostage
yesterday
Just make sure that the HD is protected from static, water, and physical knocks. USB enclosures usually do the job well, but if you have a safe place for the HD, the hot swap bay is fine. There are also hard drive docks, which are like hot swap bays in a standalone USB device.
– Christopher Hostage
yesterday
1
1
@ChristopherHostage you may be able to find enclosed trays that give all around protection. We had them for 3.5" drives at my previous job (drives were being pulled and locked in a safe nightly so they needed to be well protected); but they were bought something like a decade ago and I couldn't find an example quickly today.
– Dan Neely
yesterday
@ChristopherHostage you may be able to find enclosed trays that give all around protection. We had them for 3.5" drives at my previous job (drives were being pulled and locked in a safe nightly so they needed to be well protected); but they were bought something like a decade ago and I couldn't find an example quickly today.
– Dan Neely
yesterday
3
3
@DanNeely I've found one example: Startech hot-swap-hard-drive-bay-usb-enclosure. Must now try to resist gadget purchase.
– Andrew Morton
yesterday
@DanNeely I've found one example: Startech hot-swap-hard-drive-bay-usb-enclosure. Must now try to resist gadget purchase.
– Andrew Morton
yesterday
2
2
The photo appears to depict a device that fits in a 3.5" floppy bay, not the stated 5.25" optical drive bay.
– ScottJ
yesterday
The photo appears to depict a device that fits in a 3.5" floppy bay, not the stated 5.25" optical drive bay.
– ScottJ
yesterday
1
1
I've used removable drive bays (for 5.25" HDD drives). The ones I'm familiar with have simple connectors built in to the mating parts. I wouldn't trust such a setup for an actual "hot" swap; I always did swaps with the machine powered down. If you want to do hot swaps, make sure the device is advertised for that capability (power/ground and signal connections should mate progressively)
– Zenilogix
yesterday
I've used removable drive bays (for 5.25" HDD drives). The ones I'm familiar with have simple connectors built in to the mating parts. I wouldn't trust such a setup for an actual "hot" swap; I always did swaps with the machine powered down. If you want to do hot swaps, make sure the device is advertised for that capability (power/ground and signal connections should mate progressively)
– Zenilogix
yesterday
|
show 4 more comments
As noted by in another answer to this question, what you are (likely) looking for is called a "hot swap(pable) hard drive bay".
Hot swapping is intended to allow replacement of failed hard drivers without powering off a device. As a consequence, hot swapping a hard drives often mean being able to remove it from the front of the machine. There are inserts that allow for this via standard-sized drive bays (i.e. the hard drive sits in a tray/cage inside this bay).
1
Effectively a feature of SOHO NAS for a while (Sata). It helps to know which disk has failed if this is for RAID6 too.
– mckenzm
yesterday
add a comment |
As noted by in another answer to this question, what you are (likely) looking for is called a "hot swap(pable) hard drive bay".
Hot swapping is intended to allow replacement of failed hard drivers without powering off a device. As a consequence, hot swapping a hard drives often mean being able to remove it from the front of the machine. There are inserts that allow for this via standard-sized drive bays (i.e. the hard drive sits in a tray/cage inside this bay).
1
Effectively a feature of SOHO NAS for a while (Sata). It helps to know which disk has failed if this is for RAID6 too.
– mckenzm
yesterday
add a comment |
As noted by in another answer to this question, what you are (likely) looking for is called a "hot swap(pable) hard drive bay".
Hot swapping is intended to allow replacement of failed hard drivers without powering off a device. As a consequence, hot swapping a hard drives often mean being able to remove it from the front of the machine. There are inserts that allow for this via standard-sized drive bays (i.e. the hard drive sits in a tray/cage inside this bay).
As noted by in another answer to this question, what you are (likely) looking for is called a "hot swap(pable) hard drive bay".
Hot swapping is intended to allow replacement of failed hard drivers without powering off a device. As a consequence, hot swapping a hard drives often mean being able to remove it from the front of the machine. There are inserts that allow for this via standard-sized drive bays (i.e. the hard drive sits in a tray/cage inside this bay).
edited yesterday
answered yesterday
AnaksunamanAnaksunaman
5,48821322
5,48821322
1
Effectively a feature of SOHO NAS for a while (Sata). It helps to know which disk has failed if this is for RAID6 too.
– mckenzm
yesterday
add a comment |
1
Effectively a feature of SOHO NAS for a while (Sata). It helps to know which disk has failed if this is for RAID6 too.
– mckenzm
yesterday
1
1
Effectively a feature of SOHO NAS for a while (Sata). It helps to know which disk has failed if this is for RAID6 too.
– mckenzm
yesterday
Effectively a feature of SOHO NAS for a while (Sata). It helps to know which disk has failed if this is for RAID6 too.
– mckenzm
yesterday
add a comment |
Wizardhood2003 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Wizardhood2003 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Wizardhood2003 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Wizardhood2003 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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1
If you just have an occasional need to plug in a hard drive one of the new USB Hard drive Docks work well and can just sit on your desk.
– JPhi1618
yesterday