Good :) Now it makes sense ... Thanks
Denis
"JCO" <someone[ at ]somewhere.com> wrote in message news:%23OuKHcguHHA.5036[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...
[Quoted Text] > Note: > I tried to send an earlier response with a ebay link that has an example > of a these Mobile Racks but the message did not make it to the newsgroup. > Maybe because of the link. So I'm resending the information in this post. > > A better name is a Mobile Rack. You can get a mobile rack for either SATA > or IDE drives, so you must know which type of harddrive you have. The > connections are different for IDE Drives vs SATA drives. > > The racks are designed in two parts. Part "A" is installed (internally) > in the computer's 3.5" bay. Part "B" has a handle on it and slides in > and out of part "A". This part "B" is the part that holds the harddrive. > The two parts mate together, creating the connections. One mobile rack is > designed to hold one harddrive. Usually there is an on/off switch or a > key, that not only locks the parts together but also turns the unit on > (electrically) > > If you want to be able to switch one drive off and the other drive on, > with out changing out the drive in the rack, you will need two Mobile Rack > Units (which is what I have). Both drives are set up as a primary and you > only switch on the drive you want to boot to and switch off the drive your > not using. If you only purchase one mobile rack, you will have to pull > out part B, switch drives, then put part B back into part A. This is easy > to do. > > An advantage of 2-mobile racks is no only for convenience but also so that > you can have both drives running at the same time. In this situation, one > drive is configured as primary and the other drive is configured as Slave. > This configurations is popular if your doing backups from one drive to the > other (such as doing a clone or an Image with third party software... > Acronis True Image). > > Hope this makes sense. > > "Denis Mahony" <dmahony[ at ]iol.ie> wrote in message > news:elf%23bDduHHA.3588[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl... >> Sound like a good idea ... >> >> Is a hot-swap cradle one that takes a single drive, and you insert the >> one you wish to boot from ? >> Or does it have a capacity for two drives, and you switch on or other off >> ? >> >> Pics I've seen seem to indicate the drives are prewrapped in adaptor >> sleeve ....and slide into a slot on the PC .. >> Does that mean you have to buy a specially packaged drive ? >> Is there one that takes a bare drive(s) ? >> Googling hot swap cradle left me a little puzzled :( >> >> Denis >> >> >> >> "JCO" <someone[ at ]somewhere.com> wrote in message >> news:uGGYBkcuHHA.4916[ at ]TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... >>> The best option is to make a small investment and get another drive. >>> Make the drive swappable (purchasing a hot-swap Cradle). Then you >>> simply turn on the drive you want to use and turn off the one you don't >>> use. Both drives in a Hot Swap Cradle will have an electrical on/off >>> switch. >>> >> > >
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