Technically, yes. In this case, however, it could be easily re-assembled and there would be no indication that it was opened. The design has changed since then, you I'm not sure if the newer drives would show evidence of tampering.
Are you sure? When I removed the drive, there was a foil sticker that I had to peel away to see the tiny board attached to the drive. The board pulls right off, revealing the SATA and power connections.
i think the later versions have the usb built on the drive. the one i dismantled also had it that way...there is some extra space left that could hold a board but two rubber "cushions" occupy that space. wonder why they didn't make the case smaller then...
It just doesn't make sense that WD would have two production lines before the drives are put into enclosures. They would have more freedom to divert / repurpose the drives if they just enclose a SATA drive with an adapter.
In my case, MUCH cheaper. An external drive normally costs more than an internal drive...especially because you can buy "OEM" drives with more restrictive warrantys and no retail packaging.
However, at the time, $23 was unbelievably cheap for internal or external.
You REALLY don't know what you're talking about. I noticed the case came apart easily and recorded myself awkwardly opening it for the 1st time. I was pleased to find that the drive was a Scorpio BEVS series (useful for TheSpecialist's 360 hack).
Due to a price mistake, I paid $24 each for a few dozen drives when they were typically on special for $119 each. SCORE!
I'm also a hardware enthusiast tech nerd beyond your wildest imagination. I'm SERIOUS.
This isn't really a guide. The only useful info is in the description. Just so you know, I had more than a dozen of these drives. This was the first one I opened, and this was the first time opening it. I had noticed that the case was easy to pull apart, and this one was slightly easier than the other drives.
i have a question... can u use this as a primary hard drive in your computer? this is SATA right? im just wonderin since i have the 250G and i wanna try making it as a primary drive for my computer
Absolutely. I have already replaced some failed laptop drives with these. Some of my 120GB passports contained IDE drives, but most contained SATA. I'm pretty sure that most/all of the 250GB drives would be SATA.
If the laptop takes SATA , you should be able to use it.
You will need to have a bootable disc to install an operating system (like Windows). After booting to a Windows install disc, you will want to format the partition as NTFS or delete the partition and create a new one with NTFS.
It would work in a desktop. The interface is exactly the same for both data and power. The only problem would be mounting. There are kits to mount 2.5" drives in 3.5" bays. Some kits also include an interface adapter for IDE drives, but you wouldn't need that part...just the mounting brackets. You could rig the drive up without brackets if you were creative with rubber bands.
It would mostly likely be slower than a desktop drive; but quieter and less power-hungry.
I paid $23 each for several of these, brand new. There was a price mistake at some Best Buy stores. At the time, these were $120-$150 everywhere else.
Some of these hard drives contain IDE drives, and others contain SATA. If the type matches your laptop, it can be swapped. I have swapped these Western Digital hard drives into laptops and a Sony PS3.
It doesn't do much. You could safely throw it away. It helps the drive with adapter fit snugly in the enclosure, it insulates the static-sensitive components from your fingers as you remove the drive, and it provides some shielding against EMI (electromagnetic interference). That's about it.
Dont know. I stopped opening it when i realized i was unable to crack it open. Right now its just partly open on the upper right corner where the light is positioned. I think i might try opening it fully and then pop it back on to see if it helps
Wow. I've opened dozens now. I still have never had a problem snapping them back together with no sign of tampering. Was the internal drive SATA or IDE / PATA?
Yes. The drive enclosure uses USB 2.0 for much higher transfer speed than USB 1.1, and is still compatible with computers that have the slower USB standard. The drive inside uses the Serial ATA (SATA) interface that all newer laptops and desktops should have.
I put the 120GB Western Digital drive into my PS3 and it works great. I took the 60GB Seagate drive from the PS3 and put it back in the USB enclosure. It worked fine also. Find out who manufactured your 80GB drive. Find the downloadable manual/datasheet. See if there is a way to switch it to low-power mode or "reduced power spin-up" mode. You will need to re-partition and re-format the 80GB drive in Windows before it will be usable.
Right-click on "My Computer" and choose "Manage", then "Disk Management". Make sure you find the correct drive in the list. To the right of each drive, it shows partitions on the drive. The PS3 drive probably won't show a drive letter for its partition. If the drive doesn't show any partitions, you may need to right-click in the empty space and create one. You can right-click the partition and choose to format it. Then it should have a file system that Windows can recognize and use.
Sounds bad. It's still possible/likely that your 80GB drive requires too much power for the USB port to provide. It might work if you plug the drive into a computer's internal SATA port as a second drive.
this is more like a brute force dismantling :) you should be careful with drives. anyway, gotta go back home to dismantle mine and replace my harddisk drive.
My friend has an HP laptop with two bays, but it requires a proprietary caddy / bracket to hold the HDD. One could be purchased on eBay, but it was still incredibly annoying that the manufacturer designed the laptop to need such a thing. The only purpose of the design was to make it more difficult to use their own drive instead of an "HP Original Replacement Part". Grrr!
This post was just to show that it can be disassembled. It was just information to further help the dozens of people who got in on a SWEET deal that I tipped them off to ($23.95 @ Best Buy for a 120GB drive).
Look up the drive manufacturer's manual or data sheet (usually, a downloadable Acrobat PDF file). It might show how to switch a jumper cap to enable low-power mode. That would improve compatibility with the USB enclosure. Once you put it in the USB enclosure, you will need to partition and format the drive in Windows before it will be usable. In WinXP or WinVista: Right-click on "My Computer", click "Manage" > "Disk Management". Find the drive. Delete partitions, create, format...
you seem to know a bit about it. mine has some important documents on it. *cough*porn*cough*. I tried to get to it but the motor spins for a couple of seconds and then shuts off. the comp recognized that the hard drive was plugged in but i couldnt access it
When the drive is installed internally, I *know* that the PS3 will automatically format (proprietary file system). Connecting to the through USB to the PS3 *might* allow you to format it (try the format utility?).
If you're still using the USB enclosure, why not just connect to a PC, right-click on the drive, click "Format", change from "NTFS" to "FAT32" in the drop-down box and proceed...
I did disassemble the WD Passport...not the SATA drive contained within. I installed the Scorpio-series drive that was gutted from the WD Passport into my PS3 and moved the PS3's displaced 80GB Seagate drive back into the WD Passport enclosure. Worked like a charm.
WTF? It's the drive inside that people find useful and need access to. Destroying the drive inside helps no-one. This video demonstrated that cheap WD Passport drives are cheap and easy sources for "Scorpio" BEVS SATA drives. He paid $23.99 for that drive on clearance at Best Buy when they were well over $120 elsewhere.
It took me a LOT longer to open my Passport drive, I took a lot of care opening mine though. Check out my video of the 320Gb passport drive, it shows whats inside the device.
is that because it's cheap as hell?? i use a 160 gig passport to backup the office pc. i wonder about it because that thing has NO ventilation whatsoever, so i think it will burn out eventually (as in sooner rather than later). i also use a seagate 100 gig, and it has good ventilation
It is in low-power mode to run off a USB port, so it likely doesn't get hot enough to kill itself. I was demonstrating this for people interested in buying the drive on clearance.
not sure what you mean by, "buying the drive on clearance," but i really like this drive. i bought another one for home use. don't think i'll take it apart though :)
"Clearance" meaning that a certain retailer was selling it at a loss... instead of $129.99, it was selling for $23.99. The retailer realized that it was a mistake to put it on clearance just because a different set of colors (including black) arrived with a different set of UPC barcodes, so they fixed the price and it has gone back up. If you didn't get one already, you missed $23.99 120GB Passport drives even though they are still in stores.
well that sucks. i would have bought a bunch of them for $24. but i still don't understand what you mean. you just wanted to show people how they could take apart their clearance-priced passports? is there any purpose in taking it apart? is there something cool you can do with the "internal" part of the drive (without the case in other words)? perhaps i'm just being too curious about all this...
It is useful to upgrade a PS3 system. Also, the only way to upgrade your XBOX 360 to 120GB using TheSpecialist's unofficial method is with this specific WD Scorpio series 120GB SATA drive that happens to be in this enclosure.
Hey man thanks. I got a 120 gig version and it's not working. I think it's because my USB port doesn't put out enough power. I'm gonna pull this thing out of it's case and see if I can put it in my laptop.
But of course to boot up I'll need an operating system on a CD.
You can buy a cable from WD that draws additional power from an AC power source. I'm surprised that this optional cable is not included standard with the drive.
I actually bought that before I even saw this video. That didn't work either. It turns out that it was just a bad drive. I got it replaced and it works fine now. I don't even need the booster cable either, although I do still use since I've heard that turns off sometimes when transferring large files.
I'm in luck, I've 2 of the same antiquated model!
Nice upload, that was pretty pro. What do you do for an encore?
Shinhaquro 4 months ago
Comment removed
DJManCakes 4 months ago
niceeeeee ,bro
DJManCakes 4 months ago
Man u used ur legs on that 1!! lol Cheater!! lol Na but awesome vid u have!! lol
goku4ssvegeta 1 year ago
OPENING THE PLASTIC CASE WILL VOID WARRANTY?????
D427ZI 1 year ago
@D427ZI
Technically, yes. In this case, however, it could be easily re-assembled and there would be no indication that it was opened. The design has changed since then, you I'm not sure if the newer drives would show evidence of tampering.
jevansturner 11 months ago
one hand and 2 knee...!! bravo!!!!!!!!!!!
apocalypsch 1 year ago
is there a way i can store larger files on mine? it wont let me put over 5gb at once (per file), its an empty drive
IREALLYLIKEHIPPIES 1 year ago
@IREALLYLIKEHIPPIES
You should make sure the drive is formatted with the NTFS file system, not FAT32.
jevansturner 1 year ago
Does anyone know if the WD 250 GB allows for disconnecting the USB from the SATA?
bmoorefree 2 years ago
Thanks for this.I was wondering what kind of drive was in there.Looks like I'll be throwing on some coffee and upgrading my 360 hdd.....
SimolinCherobee 2 years ago
mine wd passport the usb sata is built on the drive
fabianrob 2 years ago
Are you sure? When I removed the drive, there was a foil sticker that I had to peel away to see the tiny board attached to the drive. The board pulls right off, revealing the SATA and power connections.
jevansturner 2 years ago
i think the later versions have the usb built on the drive. the one i dismantled also had it that way...there is some extra space left that could hold a board but two rubber "cushions" occupy that space. wonder why they didn't make the case smaller then...
zabeen623 2 years ago
Do you have pictures?
It just doesn't make sense that WD would have two production lines before the drives are put into enclosures. They would have more freedom to divert / repurpose the drives if they just enclose a SATA drive with an adapter.
jevansturner 2 years ago
are these cheaper than laptop hard drives?
oscarfish48 2 years ago
In my case, MUCH cheaper. An external drive normally costs more than an internal drive...especially because you can buy "OEM" drives with more restrictive warrantys and no retail packaging.
However, at the time, $23 was unbelievably cheap for internal or external.
jevansturner 2 years ago
Pointless, What are you trying to accomplish? It only shows that you are a noob and don't have the right experience for that kind of stuff.
khallingstad 2 years ago
You REALLY don't know what you're talking about. I noticed the case came apart easily and recorded myself awkwardly opening it for the 1st time. I was pleased to find that the drive was a Scorpio BEVS series (useful for TheSpecialist's 360 hack).
Due to a price mistake, I paid $24 each for a few dozen drives when they were typically on special for $119 each. SCORE!
I'm also a hardware enthusiast tech nerd beyond your wildest imagination. I'm SERIOUS.
What were YOU trying to say?
jevansturner 2 years ago
Pointless guide, just a freaking showoff...
You must open your case before; otherwise, it won't give in so easily.
Anyway, got an ounce of pointer.
winston618 2 years ago
This isn't really a guide. The only useful info is in the description. Just so you know, I had more than a dozen of these drives. This was the first one I opened, and this was the first time opening it. I had noticed that the case was easy to pull apart, and this one was slightly easier than the other drives.
jevansturner 2 years ago
i have a question... can u use this as a primary hard drive in your computer? this is SATA right? im just wonderin since i have the 250G and i wanna try making it as a primary drive for my computer
Rainier0009 2 years ago
Absolutely. I have already replaced some failed laptop drives with these. Some of my 120GB passports contained IDE drives, but most contained SATA. I'm pretty sure that most/all of the 250GB drives would be SATA.
If the laptop takes SATA , you should be able to use it.
You will need to have a bootable disc to install an operating system (like Windows). After booting to a Windows install disc, you will want to format the partition as NTFS or delete the partition and create a new one with NTFS.
jevansturner 2 years ago
yeh but what about using it in a desktop? thats what i meant by a computer :lol... :D
Rainier0009 2 years ago
It would work in a desktop. The interface is exactly the same for both data and power. The only problem would be mounting. There are kits to mount 2.5" drives in 3.5" bays. Some kits also include an interface adapter for IDE drives, but you wouldn't need that part...just the mounting brackets. You could rig the drive up without brackets if you were creative with rubber bands.
It would mostly likely be slower than a desktop drive; but quieter and less power-hungry.
jevansturner 2 years ago
You do realize you can just buy 2,5" drives in the store, right? Which should be cheaper.
00Maarten 3 years ago
I paid $23 each for several of these, brand new. There was a price mistake at some Best Buy stores. At the time, these were $120-$150 everywhere else.
jevansturner 3 years ago
wow
sifterbox 2 years ago
your using both your one and and your legs. that don't count. do it with one and without the hand and that thing touching anything
hotdog19902007 3 years ago
Some of these hard drives contain IDE drives, and others contain SATA. If the type matches your laptop, it can be swapped. I have swapped these Western Digital hard drives into laptops and a Sony PS3.
jevansturner 3 years ago
So, can I change this HD to my laptop's one?
What about HD? Better than Conceptronic?
Must I search a Seagate?
ragnor86 3 years ago
hey do you know whether the shiny aluminium foil is actually needed? what is it for?
p.s. - nice skill you got going there.
Saladoshrimp 3 years ago
It doesn't do much. You could safely throw it away. It helps the drive with adapter fit snugly in the enclosure, it insulates the static-sensitive components from your fingers as you remove the drive, and it provides some shielding against EMI (electromagnetic interference). That's about it.
jevansturner 3 years ago
thanks a lot man
Saladoshrimp 3 years ago
You got it.
jevansturner 3 years ago
Yeah i managed to pry it open and when i popped it back together it was fine again:)
ebc92 3 years ago
Good to hear.
jevansturner 3 years ago
Dont know. I stopped opening it when i realized i was unable to crack it open. Right now its just partly open on the upper right corner where the light is positioned. I think i might try opening it fully and then pop it back on to see if it helps
ebc92 3 years ago
Great. I cracked mine open, but now the two parts wont connect anymore.
ebc92 3 years ago
Wow. I've opened dozens now. I still have never had a problem snapping them back together with no sign of tampering. Was the internal drive SATA or IDE / PATA?
jevansturner 3 years ago
will this work as an external hard drive for my ps3?
seniortac0 3 years ago
Yes.
jevansturner 3 years ago
lol srry i wasnt thinkin bcuz its SATA and 2.5 inch but if i do get one i will most likely get seagate to be on the safe side
seniortac0 3 years ago
ooh wow isnt this guy cool
nicholaslee21 3 years ago
Yes.
jevansturner 3 years ago
Also i can say this video is FAKE
BJKKKartal 3 years ago
No.
jevansturner 3 years ago
I bought 1 from Pc World 160gb verison before use you need to format it or you cannot copy more then 4 GB that is Gay but need to :D
BJKKKartal 3 years ago
Format it as NTFS instead of FAT32, then you can copy files as big you like (but on NTFS you can't run windows on that disk)
razje 3 years ago
will a 2.0 usb connection work and where and how much did u get it?
seniortac0 3 years ago
Yes. The drive enclosure uses USB 2.0 for much higher transfer speed than USB 1.1, and is still compatible with computers that have the slower USB standard. The drive inside uses the Serial ATA (SATA) interface that all newer laptops and desktops should have.
CZroe 3 years ago
has any body tried to put this in a ps3?
babbar187 3 years ago
I put the 120GB Western Digital drive into my PS3 and it works great. I took the 60GB Seagate drive from the PS3 and put it back in the USB enclosure. It worked fine also. Find out who manufactured your 80GB drive. Find the downloadable manual/datasheet. See if there is a way to switch it to low-power mode or "reduced power spin-up" mode. You will need to re-partition and re-format the 80GB drive in Windows before it will be usable.
jevansturner 3 years ago
i got it to turn on, but now my pc doesn't recognize it and all i hear is a clicking noise when connected? thanks for you help.
babbar187 3 years ago
Right-click on "My Computer" and choose "Manage", then "Disk Management". Make sure you find the correct drive in the list. To the right of each drive, it shows partitions on the drive. The PS3 drive probably won't show a drive letter for its partition. If the drive doesn't show any partitions, you may need to right-click in the empty space and create one. You can right-click the partition and choose to format it. Then it should have a file system that Windows can recognize and use.
jevansturner 3 years ago
thanks for all the help, but unfortunately i think it's broken it won't show in disk management also it make clicking sounds.
babbar187 3 years ago
Sounds bad. It's still possible/likely that your 80GB drive requires too much power for the USB port to provide. It might work if you plug the drive into a computer's internal SATA port as a second drive.
jevansturner 3 years ago
that would also work in the xbox 360.
computerdude28 3 years ago
this is more like a brute force dismantling :) you should be careful with drives. anyway, gotta go back home to dismantle mine and replace my harddisk drive.
alpergaga 3 years ago
Nah... It came apart pretty easily. Goes back together with no sign of tampering.
jevansturner 3 years ago
My laptop has two hdd bays and I have a 160 GB Passport, guess where the passport hdd is going :)
cyclist14 3 years ago
My friend has an HP laptop with two bays, but it requires a proprietary caddy / bracket to hold the HDD. One could be purchased on eBay, but it was still incredibly annoying that the manufacturer designed the laptop to need such a thing. The only purpose of the design was to make it more difficult to use their own drive instead of an "HP Original Replacement Part". Grrr!
jevansturner 3 years ago
when does the 120 gb come in the usa any way
shadowboss675 3 years ago
I'm not sure what you mean. I purchased these in the USA when they were already quite old.
jevansturner 3 years ago
what do think you're some kind of fucking bad ass?
knobhammer 3 years ago
Were you responding to someone else?
This post was just to show that it can be disassembled. It was just information to further help the dozens of people who got in on a SWEET deal that I tipped them off to ($23.95 @ Best Buy for a 120GB drive).
jevansturner 3 years ago
Wow you're my fucking hero!
knobhammer 3 years ago
I swapped out the hard drives and the 250 gig works great on the ps3, but the 80 gig that i put back into the shell doesn't work. Any help??
babbar187 3 years ago
Look up the drive manufacturer's manual or data sheet (usually, a downloadable Acrobat PDF file). It might show how to switch a jumper cap to enable low-power mode. That would improve compatibility with the USB enclosure. Once you put it in the USB enclosure, you will need to partition and format the drive in Windows before it will be usable. In WinXP or WinVista: Right-click on "My Computer", click "Manage" > "Disk Management". Find the drive. Delete partitions, create, format...
jevansturner 3 years ago
you seem to know a bit about it. mine has some important documents on it. *cough*porn*cough*. I tried to get to it but the motor spins for a couple of seconds and then shuts off. the comp recognized that the hard drive was plugged in but i couldnt access it
yungsupa01 4 years ago
Maybe your usb isnt delivering the power for the external drive. Did you already try an other computer, maybe a newer one ?
tommeken16 3 years ago
Dude
I actually got the 120 GIG WD Passport, but the thing is that i Converted it From FAT32 to NTFS, and the PS3 wont read NTFS.
Is there any way to change it to FAT32 again?
Thanks
187closed 4 years ago
When the drive is installed internally, I *know* that the PS3 will automatically format (proprietary file system). Connecting to the through USB to the PS3 *might* allow you to format it (try the format utility?).
If you're still using the USB enclosure, why not just connect to a PC, right-click on the drive, click "Format", change from "NTFS" to "FAT32" in the drop-down box and proceed...
jevansturner 4 years ago
Well, i tried that but it din't work on Vista or XP....i had to Download an Application for the Conversion.
187closed 4 years ago
reformat it and choose fat32
jayguy173 4 years ago 2
You didn't disassemble the hard drive,
you just pulled it out of it's plastic
case.
Now had you disassembled the HD.
You would have something
kf6eii 4 years ago
I did disassemble the WD Passport...not the SATA drive contained within. I installed the Scorpio-series drive that was gutted from the WD Passport into my PS3 and moved the PS3's displaced 80GB Seagate drive back into the WD Passport enclosure. Worked like a charm.
jevansturner 4 years ago
WTF? It's the drive inside that people find useful and need access to. Destroying the drive inside helps no-one. This video demonstrated that cheap WD Passport drives are cheap and easy sources for "Scorpio" BEVS SATA drives. He paid $23.99 for that drive on clearance at Best Buy when they were well over $120 elsewhere.
CZroe 4 years ago
Took mine apart and put as internal labtop HDD it might be an older version.
brandon20904 4 years ago
LaPtop. ;) It goes on TOP of your LAP. Yes, some older ones are EIDE, but it looks like most are SATA.
CZroe 4 years ago
It took me a LOT longer to open my Passport drive, I took a lot of care opening mine though. Check out my video of the 320Gb passport drive, it shows whats inside the device.
pcarlson1979 4 years ago
Nice vid. Very good production quality.
jevansturner 4 years ago
Your video just wont load??? Can't view it
pcarlson1979 4 years ago
Is this drive a SATA or IDE drive? How big was the drive?
djentreat 4 years ago
SATA 120GB (as described)
jevansturner 4 years ago
cool. thanks!
JadeAZNdragon 4 years ago
thanks, was helpful!
davedogcaddy 4 years ago
One Hand and Two Knees. LOL :)
elmoski 4 years ago
well ok, but why do you have to dissemble with ONE HAND???? HAAAAA!!!!!!!!!! got you there bro!!! :)
isaachaze1 4 years ago
One hand holds the camcorder. :)
CZroe 4 years ago
haha good point. the 250 gig model is out now. i've been using these drives for a while now and no problems with over-heating
isaachaze1 4 years ago
is that because it's cheap as hell?? i use a 160 gig passport to backup the office pc. i wonder about it because that thing has NO ventilation whatsoever, so i think it will burn out eventually (as in sooner rather than later). i also use a seagate 100 gig, and it has good ventilation
isaachaze1 4 years ago
It is in low-power mode to run off a USB port, so it likely doesn't get hot enough to kill itself. I was demonstrating this for people interested in buying the drive on clearance.
jevansturner 4 years ago
not sure what you mean by, "buying the drive on clearance," but i really like this drive. i bought another one for home use. don't think i'll take it apart though :)
isaachaze1 4 years ago
"Clearance" meaning that a certain retailer was selling it at a loss... instead of $129.99, it was selling for $23.99. The retailer realized that it was a mistake to put it on clearance just because a different set of colors (including black) arrived with a different set of UPC barcodes, so they fixed the price and it has gone back up. If you didn't get one already, you missed $23.99 120GB Passport drives even though they are still in stores.
jevansturner 4 years ago
well that sucks. i would have bought a bunch of them for $24. but i still don't understand what you mean. you just wanted to show people how they could take apart their clearance-priced passports? is there any purpose in taking it apart? is there something cool you can do with the "internal" part of the drive (without the case in other words)? perhaps i'm just being too curious about all this...
isaachaze1 4 years ago
Why you would dissemble ... Well !!! Duh!!!
Lets say you have a laptop with 60 GB hard drive. And the new 160GB 2.5" costs $150.
You can buy this "clearance" item and upgrade your laptop. And put your old hard drive in this case ... use it as an external drive or ebay it.
jpsnagi 4 years ago
It is useful to upgrade a PS3 system. Also, the only way to upgrade your XBOX 360 to 120GB using TheSpecialist's unofficial method is with this specific WD Scorpio series 120GB SATA drive that happens to be in this enclosure.
jevansturner 4 years ago
oh. i only use my pc for gaming. that's good to know though. i might get a 360 at some point
isaachaze1 4 years ago
Hey man thanks. I got a 120 gig version and it's not working. I think it's because my USB port doesn't put out enough power. I'm gonna pull this thing out of it's case and see if I can put it in my laptop.
But of course to boot up I'll need an operating system on a CD.
skylinegtrz 4 years ago
You can buy a cable from WD that draws additional power from an AC power source. I'm surprised that this optional cable is not included standard with the drive.
jevansturner 4 years ago
I actually bought that before I even saw this video. That didn't work either. It turns out that it was just a bad drive. I got it replaced and it works fine now. I don't even need the booster cable either, although I do still use since I've heard that turns off sometimes when transferring large files.
skylinegtrz 4 years ago
Could you please rename the title to "Disassembling WD Passport with ONE HAND and TWO KNEES" LOL Nice man
anderson3133 4 years ago
I just bought the new 250GB passport and it is INCREDIBLY tempting to dismantle it and install it in my notebook.
nottafanboy6954 4 years ago