I had a simular problem when using an external USB case to format & test a fresh high capacity HD.
I switched the drive to a Firewire case and was able to get it to work. I suspect either the USB cable or case I had was bad or not good enough for the larger HD. After some research I learned the issue is Power! (also make sure you have a heavy duty USB 2.0 cable)
The USB port you are using on your system may not have enough power to power the HD by its self (single cable). What you need is a double Y cable (uses two ports on your computer). Or, you need to add an external power to the HD via a AC power block.
If your HD is able to be reformatted with a Firewire/USB case using as external AC power block then you don't have a bad HD and you have other issues within your MacBook Pro system.
MacBook Pro issues:
There's no difference internally in the HD cabling so thats off the table. It's possible your cable is damaged when you took your system apart. amke sure you didn't damage it.
Size and heat are the next things to check. Many of these bigger HD's are slightly larger as the space is tight in the laptop you could encounter either a pinched HD case which is hitting the head armature or have heat build up causing the HD to fail. Do you see any dents in the HD cover? Double check the size of your old HD is the new drive the same or smaller size? To measure you should use a Metric dial caliper or look up the HD on the vendors web page.
2条评论
Well, nothing has worked yet. I've erased, reinstalled lion, transferred data. When the 750/7200 drive is installed in the body of the MacBook Pro, it is not even recognized as being installed. However, when the old hard drive is installed and the 750/7200 is back in the usb case, it can boot from either drive. The y-cable question doesn't matter. The computer does not even recognize the drive when it is physically installed, yet it will boot from that same drive when it is attached via usb. Bear in mind that this is all via selection from using the 'option' key on bootup. Makes no sense to me, unless the person that told me that this machine's drive cable cannot handle this drive was correct.
由 rob 完成的
The only thing that makes sense is you have not set the drive's jumper to limit it to 1.5GBs. There are thousands of WEB pages, maybe millions, discussing problems with Apple laptops with SATA 2 hard drives running at their native 3GBs.
由 ABCellars 完成的