- Aug 19, 2012
- 17
- 0
- 0
I'm digging through Newegg and TigerDirect and I see only a handful of 3.5" SSDs. There are tons of 2.5 though. Is there a reason for this, or am I just looking for them at a bad time?
Why would you want 3½"?
5 1/4" spinning platter HDs are even more rare.
I was told by the chat support at Tigerdirect that a 2.5" wouldn't work in my desktop. I suspected there would be enclosures that would help it, but I couldn't find any. He never told me they had them.
I was told by the chat support at Tigerdirect that a 2.5" wouldn't work in my desktop. I suspected there would be enclosures that would help it, but I couldn't find any. He never told me they had them.
5 1/4" spinning platter HDs are even more rare.
Imagine the amount of space though.............
And for hurting sales.He's an idiot, report him to his supervisor for giving false info to costumers.
I was told by the chat support at Tigerdirect that a 2.5" wouldn't work in my desktop.
I was told by the chat support at Tigerdirect that a 2.5" wouldn't work in my desktop. I suspected there would be enclosures that would help it, but I couldn't find any. He never told me they had them.
All the enclosure you need is a piece of 2 sided foam tape from your local drugstore.
Or a couple strips of stickyback velcro.
These things don't vibrate or anything and are quite light. You can "mount" them in any number of ways. You don't need to buy a tray if you have something lying around the house that might work.
![]()
The quanitum Big Foot!
It was the Tim Allen Drive... *grunt grunt*
There is no difference in the SATA data and power cables so it becomes a waste of space and eliminates it's usage in a laptop. 2.5" SSDs often come with a 2.5" to 3.5" adapter and more importantly orientation is not an issue. You can just tape it or use picture mounting putty. Lots of people duct tape it... seriously.
![]()
The quanitum Big Foot!
It was the Tim Allen Drive... *grunt grunt*
LOL... actually, it wasnt by much.
I believe its harder and requires a much different motor to spin a drive that big, which is why it had so many freaken failure rates.
It was litterally called the Range Rover of Hard drives.. as in like a range rover from that era... its always BROKEN.
![]()
The quanitum Big Foot!
It was the Tim Allen Drive... *grunt grunt*
LOL... actually, it wasnt by much.
I believe its harder and requires a much different motor to spin a drive that big, which is why it had so many freaken failure rates.
It was litterally called the Range Rover of Hard drives.. as in like a range rover from that era... its always BROKEN.
one time i ran across a drive that took up a full height bay (for all of 5 MB of storage, probably). those bigfoot drives used a half height bay.
I'm digging through Newegg and TigerDirect and I see only a handful of 3.5" SSDs. There are tons of 2.5 though. Is there a reason for this, or am I just looking for them at a bad time?