Friday, December 31, 2010

Time Capsule Hard Drive Upgrade (1tb to to 2tb or 3tb)

**** UPDATE****

I originally did this blog posting December, 2010.  My 2 tb drive recently died and I decided to try a 3 tb drive in the time capsule to get even more space.  Of course the net and the boards all have a lot of contradictory information but enough people said that the WD Green 3tb drive (WD30EZRX)
 worked fine.  I bought the boxed/retail kit version and had no problems.  You can scroll down to the bottom for a link to one on amazon.com).  Anyway, enjoy the post!


Any business that has client's projects stored on it's hard drive should have a few different backup systems for said files. Hard drives do eventually fail and while there's ways to get files back those methods are expensive and not guaranteed. Hard drive space is so cheap now that there really is no excuse not to have multiple backups of your files.

A few years ago Apple came out with Time Machine and it's hardware counterpart, the Time Capsule. Time Machine is Apple's clever backup system that backs up your hard drive incrementally so if you delete something accidentally and realize it 2 weeks later you can still go back and get the file. Brilliant! The Time Capsule is basically an Apple Airport base station with a hard drive in it. It allows you to backup your files wirelessly so the backup system can be safely put in another room out of the way where all the action is.

I have a kind of love/hate relationship with Time Machine/Time Capsule but Apple really has come a long way with both systems and stability has been much improved over the last few years. I bought mine when they first came out so I guess I was just asking for some bugs.

So now we come to the real reason of this blog. As I said I bought one of the first Time Capsules and while I bought the 1 tb version I really need more hard drive space now. I've noticed recently that my incremental backups only go back about a few weeks when they use to go back a few months. This is a result of my music projects taking up more space because of different and bigger files types that are used in modern productions.

My options were to buy a new 2tb Time Capsule at a cost of about 549.00 or I could pay 100.00 dollars and buy a new 2tb hard drive and install it into my Time Capsule. My only worry about doing that was that the ATA interface wouldn't recognize the space, but I took the gamble and it paid off.

Here's some pictures I took of the upgrade process. I'm only doing this to help everyone out, I am not claiming to be an Apple expert or anything. ***DO AT YOUR OWN RISK***, I take no responsibility for any problems encountered during the upgrade.

STEP 1

Unplug all the cables from the Time Capsule (especially the power cable!) and turn it upside down.



STEP 2

The rubber bottom of the unit is simply glued on. You will need to use a hair dryer or heat gun as you're pulling the rubber up to avoid ripping the rubber. I ended up ripping my rubber base so take this part of the step seriously! :)


STEP 3

Unscrew the base. The rubber coated screws don't need to be unscrewed.




STEP 4

The innards of the Time Capsule


STEP 5

A close up of the old drive in the Time Capsule. Surprisingly the drive is not fastened at all with any screws. You just need to remove the temperature sensor and unplug the connections to the drive.





STEP 6

Here's a close up of the temperature sensor (covered in foam). It's glued on and comes off pretty easily.




STEP 7

A picture of the sensor removed from the drive and popping out of the foam. Make sure to place it on the new drive properly again. This is what tells the fan to come on if the drive starts to overheat.


STEP 8

Here's a pic of the Time Capsule without the hard drive.



STEP 9

Putting the new hard drive in. Remember to put that temperature sensor on the drive again!




STEP 10

Drive safely installed! I chose a Western Digital Green drive because they're known to run cooler and quieter than other drives. Apparently they use less power too. As most of you know the Time Capsule with the installed drive gets quite hot so a cooler running drive is definitely the way to go. Look below for a link to get a good deal on a WD drive.


STEP 11

Last step is to open Airport Utility (Applications->Utilities). Select manual setup once you see your time capsule on the side. On the top menu select hard drive and your new Western Digital drive should show up (I greyed out the name of mine for security reasons). You'll need to format it first to use it. Just select erase on the screen and it will be formatted.



Here's a link to get a good price on the WD 2tb Green drive:
          2tb                          


or try for a bigger drive option here:




If you're not so great with the do it yourself stuff and just want to buy a new Time Capsule you can do so here. Definitely cheaper than the apple store:



Catch me on the sites:








12 comments:

  1. Excellent, thanks for the how to, just upgraded. 5 minutes work from a 512mb to a 2TB.. how cool is that..

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  2. I upgraded the HDD in my time capsule back in 2010 (put a 2 TB disk in a 500 Gig Time Capsule) and it all went smoothly (I thought it did anyway). Now looking at the amount of space remaining on my time capsule, having used it for a long time, it seems like the time capsule may be imposing the previous hard drive limit (500 gig) on a new larger drive (2T). The new drive I put in it formatted fine and the available space showed up correctly (1.8 T formatted). It's been over 6 months and it still hasn't filled it up saying there is only 522.6 Gig used. Now I realize the 500-gig (formatted) limit would be less than 522.6. I have a 500 Gig drive on my MacBook pro and my wife backs up to it as well with her MacBook. Even though yours seemed to work fine when you first installed it, did it go ahead and fill up the whole disk once you used it over time?

    My setup:
    17" MacBook Pro 2.16 GHz Intel Core Duo
    2 GB RAM
    Mac OS 10.6.7
    500 Gig G1 Time Capsule (originally a 500 gig anyway)

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  3. I just checked and I have 600 gigs left and I've been using the new drive since early January. Keep in mind that the size of your drive doesn't matter so much as how much space you're using and also how many changes occur on your drive from day to day. If you're just using your computer in a typical office setting you won't be going through a lot of big files from day to day and so there won't be a lot of things to back up. I run a recording studio so my files change by 2-10 gigs a day!

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  4. Can you tell us which hard disk model did you used? I've red on a different site that WD EARS models are having problems to be recognized by TC. If that is true is really sad cause those drives have a larger cache which should be better in case of drops of the WIFI signal during backups that might result in corrupting them.

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  5. I used the Western Digital 2tb Green Drive. You can see an ad to buy iton amazon just above the comments section. I can't speak to any other drive as I haven't tried them. A lot of people use the green drive cause it runs cooler.

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  6. Could you advise on whether the WD Caviar Green drive spins down when the TC goes idle? There are a number of people on various forums saying the drive does not spin down. If the drive does spin down correctly in your TC, could you also advise whether you set any jumpers on the drive before installing it.

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  7. Hi, i´m using the WG 2TB EARX model. Everything works well, but the disk never stop running ... so the TC still keep warm.
    Do you have an idea why the drive don´t stop running when backup is done?

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  8. Hi, Can a 3 TB WD Green SATA drive be used instead of a 2 TB. My wife is a photographer and her photos take up a lot space.

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  9. Yep, I recently swapped out my original 2tb drive shown in this mod for a 3tb Western Digital Green drive.

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  10. I can't really answer if the drive will spin down. I believe mine did but maybe some models don't. Sorry I couldn't be more help...

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  11. This comment has been removed by the author.

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