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500 GB 5400 RPM SATA Hard Drive (New)

$99.95

Product code: IF107-060-1

Product Overview

Even before junk existed, storage containers have been used for stashing broken furniture, stockpiling newspapers, and holding 3-dimensional Tetris championships. Cram in the goods and games with our sizable 500 GB 5400 RPM SATA Hard Drive today.

Serial ATA (SATA) interface.

Compatibility

Identify your Mac

  • All MacBooks and MacBook Pros (excluding MacBook Air)
  • All Intel Mac minis
  • All Sony PS3 and PS3 Slim consoles

Product Details

  • Speed: 5400 RPM
  • Dimensions: 2.5" wide x 9.5mm tall
  • Capacity: 500 GB Unformatted

  $99.95

 

Condition:

New

Warranty:

3-year manufacturer warranty

Add to Cart »

9 Available

Quantity:

 

Installation Guides

Mac Mini Mid 2010

Difficulty: Moderate

Mac mini Model A1176

Difficulty: Moderate

Mac mini Model A1283

Difficulty: Moderate

MacBook Core 2 Duo

Difficulty: Easy

MacBook Core Duo

Difficulty: Easy

MacBook Pro 13" Unibody Mid 2009

Difficulty: Moderate

MacBook Pro 13" Unibody Mid 2010

Difficulty: Moderate

MacBook Pro 15" Unibody Mid 2009

Difficulty: Moderate

MacBook Pro 15" Unibody Mid 2010

Difficulty: Moderate

MacBook Pro 17" Unibody

Difficulty: Moderate

MacBook Unibody Model A1278

Difficulty: Easy

MacBook Unibody Model A1342

Difficulty: Moderate

PlayStation 3

Difficulty: Moderate

PlayStation 3 Slim

Difficulty: Moderate

 

Compatibility

Mac Mini Mid 2011
2 GHz (A1347)
2.33 GHz (A1347)
2.5 GHz (A1347)
2.7 GHz (A1347)
Mac mini Model A1176
1.5 GHz (Core Solo, A1176)
1.66 GHz (Core Duo, Early 2006)
1.66 GHz (Core Duo, Late 2006)
1.83 GHz (Core 2 Duo, Mid 2007)
1.83 GHz (Core Duo, Late 2006)
2 GHz (Core 2 Duo, A1176)
Mac mini Model A1283
2 GHz (Core 2 Duo, A1283)
2.26 GHz (A1283)
2.53 GHz (A1283)
2.66 GHz (A1283)
Mac mini Model A1347
2.4 GHz (A1347)
2.66 GHz (A1347)
MacBook Core 2 Duo
1.83 GHz (Core 2 Duo)
2 GHz (C2D, Late 2006)
2 GHz (C2D, Mid 2007)
2 GHz (Early 2009)
2 GHz (Santa Rosa)
2.1 GHz (Penryn)
2.13 GHz (Mid 2009)
2.16 GHz (Core 2 Duo)
2.2 GHz (Santa Rosa)
2.4 GHz (Penryn)
MacBook Core Duo
1.83 GHz (Core Duo)
2 GHz (Core Duo)
MacBook Pro 13" Unibody Early 2011
2.3 GHz (Early 2011)
2.7 GHz (Early 2011)
MacBook Pro 13" Unibody Late 2011
2.4 GHz (Late 2011)
2.8 GHz (Late 2011)
MacBook Pro 13" Unibody Mid 2009
2.26 GHz (Mid 2009)
2.53 GHz (Mid 2009)
MacBook Pro 13" Unibody Mid 2010
2.4 GHz (Mid 2010)
2.66 GHz (Mid 2010)
MacBook Pro 15" Core 2 Duo Model A1211
2.16 GHz (Core 2 Duo)
2.33 GHz (Core 2 Duo)
MacBook Pro 15" Core 2 Duo Models A1226 and A1260
2.2 GHz (Santa Rosa)
2.4 GHz (Penryn)
2.4 GHz (Santa Rosa)
2.5 GHz (Penryn)
2.6 GHz (Penryn)
2.6 GHz (Santa Rosa)
MacBook Pro 15" Core Duo Model A1150
1.83 GHz (Core Duo)
2 GHz (Core Duo)
2.16 GHz (Core Duo)
MacBook Pro 15" Unibody 2.53 GHz Mid 2009
2.53 GHz (Mid 2009)
MacBook Pro 15" Unibody Early 2011
2 GHz (Early 2011)
2.2 GHz (Early 2011)
2.3 GHz (Early 2011)
MacBook Pro 15" Unibody Late 2008 and Early 2009
2.4 GHz (Late 2008)
2.53 GHz (Late 2008)
2.66 GHz (Early 2009)
2.8 GHz (Late 2008)
2.93 GHz (Early 2009)
MacBook Pro 15" Unibody Late 2011
2.2 GHz (Late 2011)
2.4 GHz (Late 2011)
2.5 GHz (Late 2011)
MacBook Pro 15" Unibody Mid 2009
2.66 GHz (Mid 2009)
2.8 GHz (Mid 2009)
3.06 GHz (Mid 2009)
MacBook Pro 15" Unibody Mid 2010
2.4 GHz (Mid 2010)
2.53 GHz (Mid 2010)
2.66 GHz (Mid 2010)
2.8 GHz (Mid 2010)
MacBook Pro 17" Models A1151 A1212 A1229 and A1261
2.16 GHz (Core Duo)
2.33 GHz (Core 2 Duo)
2.4 GHz (Santa Rosa)
2.5 GHz (Penryn)
2.6 GHz (Penryn)
2.6 GHz (Santa Rosa)
MacBook Pro 17" Unibody
2.53 GHz (Mid 2010)
2.66 GHz (Early 2009)
2.66 GHz (Mid 2010)
2.8 GHz (Mid 2009)
2.8 GHz (Mid 2010)
2.93 GHz (Early 2009)
3.06 GHz (Mid 2009)
MacBook Pro 17" Unibody Early 2011
2.2 GHz (Early 2011)
2.3 GHz (Early 2011)
MacBook Unibody Model A1278
2 GHz (A1278)
2.4 GHz (A1278)
MacBook Unibody Model A1342
2.26 GHz (A1342)
2.4 GHz (A1342)
PlayStation 3
CECHA
CECHB
CECHC
CECHE
CECHG
CECHH
CECHJ
CECHK
CECHL
CECHM
CECHP
CECHQ
PlayStation 3 Slim
CECH-20xx
CECH-21xx
CECH-25xx
 

Stories

fjrsuriel's Story Photo #149412

My Problem

My Mac was super slow and freezing every time i tried to get in a folder. so i took it to a Apple center (in Dominican Republic is expensive Apple's hardware) so they told me it was the hard drive but when they told me the price for repair my Mac, it was to expensive around $USD300.00, thats why i decided to Fix it my self every problem that my mac had :p

My Fix

Very easy to change the hard drive every body can do it whit the right tools. The guide was great

My Advice

This is a very good page!! definitely ill buy again from these page, friendly and very helpful guide.

Thanks iFixit.

My Problem

My wife and I swapped over to Mac computers in 2008. I had just bought an iPod touch and was eyeing the new iPhone 3G and my wife wanted a computer was easy and fun to use. We bought our MacBook Pro refurbished, it was an early 2008 Intel Core 2 Duo Model. It was fast, sleek, cool, and everything we wanted.

Over the years we demanded more and more of it. I purchased a Time Capsule to augment it's storage capabilities as we moved to an all digital library of movies and TV shows. Our plucky little MBP kept going.

In the summer of 2011, our plucky little MBP hit a snag. It's logic board just fried. The combination of heat and wear and tear had pushed it beyond its limits. After a little searching I discovered that this was a common issue with this model of MBP. I took it by the Apple store and BAM they replaced it for free. So, now our MBP was on it's third life.

It soldiered on for a couple more months, but slowly it got worse and worse, slower and slower. After installing Lion, it was barely able to load and run iPhoto. It got so slow that I basically stopped using it. We had all but given up hope that our little MBP would recover. I had picked out a sleek, new MacBook Air to replace her, but after some research I discovered that the hard drive might be the main culprit. With prices so low, I figured, why not?

So, I decided to upgrade her RAM (from 2 to 4 GB) and install a new drive (also upgrading from 200 to 500 GB). I figured, if it worked she would have a fourth lease on life. If not, well then I wasted $150 and I could use the hard drive on something else.

My Fix

I got the hard drive and tools in the mail, as well as the RAM which I received via a merchant on Amazon.

I installed the RAM first, which was very simple and I saw an immediate improvement - not much, but it was promising.

I was dying to crack my MBP open and swap the hard drive out, but the drive didn't arrive before I left to see family for the weekend. So I had to wait until Saturday night to make the swap.

After reviewing the instructions and setting up my iPhone 4S to capture a time lapse video, I buckled down and made the swap.

You can see two time lapse videos of the install on my Vimeo page. One is fairly fast with no music (http://vimeo.com/36213995), the other one is slower and I add some Coldplay to brighten things up (http://vimeo.com/36352860).

I only ran into three problems.

1) The magnetic clasp and the mag safe power cord were constantly eating and pulling my screws around. It was more an annoyance than anything, but I spent about 10 minutes looking for a screw that ended up being stuck to the mag safe power outlet. Annoying, but not that big of a deal.

2) Pulling off the connections for the keyboard/trackpad and the logic board were a little precarious and I was worried I would damage them. The spudger tool that I got from ifixit.com, however, was a life saver. I wouldn't want to try that task with anything other than that plastic spudger. It is the perfect combination of soft, firm, thin, and sturdy to do the trick.

3) Removing and replacing the ribbon on top of the hard drive was a pain. The glue was extremely sticky and I was again worried about damaging it. Placing it back down was tricky as well because the first time I left too much slack and the connections didn't line up right.

Overall, everything was fairly straight forward. The instructions and pictures on ifixit.com were a lifesaver (couldn't have done it without them). The process took about an hour, and everything works great.

My MBP is like a new machine. I spent all told about $150 and I saved myself the cost of buying a new MacBook Air, for now at least.

My Advice

Use the right tools. It is worth the $5 or $6 for the right screwdriver, spudger tool, etc. I've tried fixing my iPhone(s) and my old desktop with the tools I had laying around and it was more trouble than it was worth. The right tools for the right job, definitely applies when you are performing brain surgery on a laptop.

My Problem

My wife and I swapped over to Mac computers in 2008. I had just bought an iPod touch and was eyeing the new iPhone 3G and my wife wanted a computer was easy and fun to use. We bought our MacBook Pro refurbished, it was an early 2008 Intel Core 2 Duo Model. It was fast, sleek, cool, and everything we wanted.

Over the years we demanded more and more of it. I purchased a Time Capsule to augment it's storage capabilities as we moved to an all digital library of movies and TV shows. Our plucky little MBP kept going.

In the summer of 2011, our plucky little MBP hit a snag. It's logic board just fried. The combination of heat and wear and tear had pushed it beyond its limits. After a little searching I discovered that this was a common issue with this model of MBP. I took it by the Apple store and BAM they replaced it for free. So, now our MBP was on it's third life.

It soldiered on for a couple more months, but slowly it got worse and worse, slower and slower. After installing Lion, it was barely able to load and run iPhoto. It got so slow that I basically stopped using it. We had all but given up hope that our little MBP would recover. I had picked out a sleek, new MacBook Air to replace her, but after some research I discovered that the hard drive might be the main culprit. With prices so low, I figured, why not?

So, I decided to upgrade her RAM (from 2 to 4 GB) and install a new drive (also upgrading from 200 to 500 GB). I figured, if it worked she would have a fourth lease on life. If not, well then I wasted $150 and I could use the hard drive on something else.

My Fix

I got the hard drive and tools in the mail, as well as the RAM which I received via a merchant on Amazon.

I installed the RAM first, which was very simple and I saw an immediate improvement - not much, but it was promising.

I was dying to crack my MBP open and swap the hard drive out, but the drive didn't arrive before I left to see family for the weekend. So I had to wait until Saturday night to make the swap.

After reviewing the instructions and setting up my iPhone 4S to capture a time lapse video, I buckled down and made the swap.

You can see two time lapse videos of the install on my Vimeo page. One is fairly fast with no music (http://vimeo.com/36213995), the other one is slower and I add some Coldplay to brighten things up (http://vimeo.com/36352860).

I only ran into three problems.

1) The magnetic clasp and the mag safe power cord were constantly eating and pulling my screws around. It was more an annoyance than anything, but I spent about 10 minutes looking for a screw that ended up being stuck to the mag safe power outlet. Annoying, but not that big of a deal.

2) Pulling off the connections for the keyboard/trackpad and the logic board were a little precarious and I was worried I would damage them. The spudger tool that I got from ifixit.com, however, was a life saver. I wouldn't want to try that task with anything other than that plastic spudger. It is the perfect combination of soft, firm, thin, and sturdy to do the trick.

3) Removing and replacing the ribbon on top of the hard drive was a pain. The glue was extremely sticky and I was again worried about damaging it. Placing it back down was tricky as well because the first time I left too much slack and the connections didn't line up right.

Overall, everything was fairly straight forward. The instructions and pictures on ifixit.com were a lifesaver (couldn't have done it without them). The process took about an hour, and everything works great.

My MBP is like a new machine. I spent all told about $150 and I saved myself the cost of buying a new MacBook Air, for now at least.

My Advice

Use the right tools. It is worth the $5 or $6 for the right screwdriver, spudger tool, etc. I've tried fixing my iPhone(s) and my old desktop with the tools I had laying around and it was more trouble than it was worth. The right tools for the right job, definitely applies when you are performing brain surgery on a laptop.

My Problem

Wanted a bigger hard drive.

My Fix

Easy - I paid a local shop $30 to swap the drive. I partitioned it and had it set up in 1/2 a day. Lion was a download for me, so I had to install Snow Leopard from CD first. That was the only annoying part.

My Advice

Backup first!

My Problem

I had my macbook for almost 5 years and love it. Than my hard drive crashed and I needed a new one. Instead of having apple give me a 120 GB drive for $200, I ordered a $500 GB drive for less than $100. Great Deal!

My Fix

Repair was extremely easy and went great.

My Advice

Just make sure you have a torx screw driver handy.

My Problem

My 160GB HD was too small for my ever expanding Race Track Video collection. To top it off my MAC began to run slower, so adding a storage HD was a must.

My Fix

The repair went fine except some of the mounting holes had to be modified with a pair of needle nose pliers. The new 500GB HD boot up perfect and I moved over 110GB of music and video with no problems by configuring iMovie and iTunes to save to the new HD. Kudos iFix-it!!!!!!!!!!

My Advice

Do this if you do not use your optical drive!

myimmortal23907's Story Photo #121793

My Problem

In the past several weeks, by Lion release date, I noticed, that my Mac Mini wasn't capable of handling the new software, mainly for RAM issues and also is an insult to live with a 60GB HDD.

My Fix

Very well, do it by my self, with Mac mini mid 2007, no further problems, and everything works at the first start.

My Advice

Check every step of any guide to the end, and be sure to feel comfortable with the procedure you are about to attempt.