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Can we upgrade hard disk to bigger hard disk space for Macbook Air?

My Disk space in Macbook Air is running out, can I have an option to have a hard disk upgrade?

MacBook Air

Posted on Nov 27, 2013 5:24 AM

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Posted on Nov 27, 2013 5:28 AM

There are several larger HDA modules that will work. Apple will not do the upgrade for you. You'll need to either contact a third-party repair service that will perform this upgrade, or purchase an hDA, and do the repair yourself.

22 replies

Nov 27, 2013 7:39 AM in response to Chua.iv

Chua.iv

My Disk space in Macbook Air is running out,


you need an external HD for static files and large media files.


The ONLY reason you would really need a bigger SSD is if you plan on installing a few 100 APPS and working on big video editing on your Air,...and i DOUBT thats the case.


In the case of a Macbook Air or Macbook Pro Retina with ‘limited’ storage on the SSD, this distinction becomes more important in that in an ever rapidly increasing file-size world, you keep vital large media files, pics, video, PDF collections, music off your SSD and archived on external storage, for sake of the necessary room for your system to have free space to operate, store future applications and general workspace. You should never be put in the position of considering “deleting things” on your macbook SSD in order to ‘make space’.


Professionals who create and import very large amounts of data have almost no change in the available space on their computers internal HD because they are constantly archiving data to arrays of external or networked HD.


Or in the case of the consumer this means you keep folders for large imported or created data and you ritually offload and archive this data for safekeeping, not only to safeguard the data in case your macbook has a HD crash, or gets stolen, but importantly in keeping the ‘breathing room’ open for your computer to operate, expand, create files, add applications, for your APPS to create temp files, and for general operation.

Nov 27, 2013 9:22 AM in response to Chua.iv

If your disk is 80% full that is normal. Time Machine uses up to 80% of the disk space for local snapshots. To get rid of these snapshots simply plug in your Time Machine backup drive and run a backup. See About Time Machine's 'local snapshots' on Mac notebooks: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4878 and What are Local Snapshots? http://pondini.org/TM/30.html .


If you are concerned that the “Other” category of disk usage is taking too much space then look here: https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-5142


If you have less than 20% disk space then it is time to roll up your sleeves and search for what you can delete and what you can offload to another disk.


If you have less than 10 GB you definitely need to delete or offload some files or purchase a lager disk or SSD (see below). You may want to maintain at least 20 GB of free space so when your disk starts filling again it will have some room before it hits that 10 GB mark again. More headroom is better. If you let the space fall much below 9 GB you might not be able to boot your machine.


Initial easy steps to gain disk space:

- Delete all files in the Downloads folder.

- Empty the trash.

- Start iPhoto, empty its trash and restart the computer.


Clear logfiles:

Leave the machine on overnight without running the Energy Saver or closing the lid. Use the screen saver instead. The logfile cleanup should run.


Deleting files:

Run a Time Machine (or other) backup since you are about to delete and move files and you may need to recover from any inadvertent mistakes or decisions. You will need one external hard drive for your Time Machine (or other) backup and a second if you plan to offload some files. (See suggestions for where to purchase hard drives at the end of this message.)


Then use the free application OmniDiskSweeper http://www.omnigroup.com/more to explore your volume in descending order by size so you can attack the problem from the top down, deleting the largest unwanted files first. Delete with caution and do not delete any system files. Remember to empty the trash after trashing the files.


Additional reference on freeing disk space:

http://pondini.org/OSX/DiskSpace.html


Offloading files:

Consider moving some of the no-often-used large files or directories to an external disk. Use ODS again to find them. As noted above this will be at least your second hard drive. Your first one(s) is/are for your Time Machine (or other) backup(s). Do not offload files onto a Time Machine disk.


Format the second drive as Mac OS Extended (journaled). Using OWS to find large files/folders and copy them from the system drive to the external hard drive and delete them from your internal drive.


Then  > System Preferences > Time Machine > Options… > Remove the offload HD name from the exclusions list.

Now both your system disk and your external offload disk will be backed up onto your Time Machine disk.


For more about backups:

Time Machine Basics: http://support.apple.com/kb/ht1427

Most commonly used backup methods:

https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-3045

Methodology to protect your data. Backups vs. Archives. Long-term data protection:

https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-6031


—————


From: http://www.thexlab.com/faqs/freeingspace.html


To move your iTunes Music folder to another disk or partition:


To change the location of your iTunes Music folder, carefully follow the instructions in the AppleCare® Knowledge Base document "iTunes for Mac: Moving your iTunes Music folder."Additional information can be found in iTunes Help.

http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:http://www.thexlab.com/105/ 00000849.html


Laptop users may want to consider having two iTunes libraries: a small library of current favorites on their computer, while their complete library resides on an external hard drive. Utilities like iTunes Library Manager enable you to easily have multiple iTunes libraries you can use with your account. https://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/7689/itunes-library-manager


To move your iPhoto Library folder to another disk or partition:


To move the iPhoto Library folder to a new location, employ the instructions in the AppleCare Knowledge Base document from http://support.apple.com/kb/PH2506 corresponding to the version of iPhoto you are using. Additional information can be found in iPhoto Help.


Laptop users may want to consider having two iPhoto libraries: a small library of current, favorite photographs on their computer, while their complete library, or archives of older photos are saved on an external hard drive. Utilities such as iPhoto Buddy and iPhoto Library Manager enable you to have multiple iPhoto libraries that you can use with your account.


https://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/12175/iphoto-buddy

https://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/7158/iphoto-library-manager


Hardware — Bigger disk/SSD:


If your system has upgradeable storage then if you are still tight on disk space consider larger storage. If you have a disk consider replacing it with a one TB disk. Check out a one terabyte HGST 7K1000 7200 rpm, SATA III drive from OWC http://eshop.macsales.com ($100). If you have an SSD consider doubling its capacity. A standard 240 GB SSD would cost from $200 to $280. A standard 480 GB SSD would cost from $420 to $520. See OWC and Crucial: http://www.crucial.com/ for options. OWC sells 120, 240 and480 GB SSD upgrades for 2009 to 2012 MacBook Airs for $120 to $525 and a 120 GB SSD upgrade for 2008 models for $155. http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/SSD/OWC/


PlotinusVeritas gives some great suggestions for purchasing external hard drives in this thread:

https://discussions.apple.com/thread/5602141?tstart=0

Feb 28, 2014 8:05 AM in response to PlotinusVeritas

I get what you are saying, but that is not the ONLY reason. Those of us who like to keep music locally on our laptops and don't want to have to plug in an external drive everytime we use iTunes NEED the extra space. Also, if you play any sort of high-end game on your laptop, (which it does surprisingly well), Games like World of Warcraft and SimCity each take around 30gb of storage! Media is constantly getting larger and the "average person" NEEDS more space. Also, you say that "proffesionals" have external hard drives to store large files. While that is true, it looks very tacky as a "proffessional" to have a $1000 laptop with an ugly hard drive hanging off it. Especially when most PC laptops can have Terrabytes of space if needed. There is no "cookie cutter" solution. Everyone is different. So please try actually helping people with what they WANT TO DO instead of talking down to them saying "they don't need to do it".

Feb 28, 2014 10:28 AM in response to Donnutt


Donnutt wrote:


Those of us who like to keep music locally on our laptops


While that is true, it looks very tacky as a "proffessional" to have a $1000 laptop with an ugly hard drive hanging off it. Especially when most PC laptops can have Terrabytes of space if needed.



SSD for the Air are not in the TB range.


HOW MUCH music do you need within a 2 week period? allocate 15GB to just music or so at a time, that would be quite a few 1000 songs.


External superslim HD are very small. However the "tacky" references has no bearing on anything.


Professionals care about data protection and redundancy, not if something looks "tacky" 😉


Even if your Air had a 3TB SSD (which isnt possible) inside, you would still need to pack around an external HD


Why?

1. data redundancy

2. TM backups

3. mirroring working files for immediate backup in case of SSD failure.





You need to change the premise of your SSD use. 😊

see here:

Your Solid State Drive and having enough space inside your Macbook Air & Pro


Solid State Drive usage premise, or the “more space / upgrade SSD” question

There have been questions posed and positions taken by many people who are trying to use their Macbook Air or Pro’s solid state drive (SSD) as a mass media storage device, for either pictures, videos, massive music collections or all three combined; but this should not be the working premise of a ‘limited’ SSD and its use.

In which, it’s the case of those users with either 128GB, 256GB, or even 512GB of internal SSD space, that have or are running “out of space”, that questions are raised. The immediate premise of some users can sometimes be “(how to / if) upgrading my SSD” when in fact in nearly all instances another approach is the logical and sensible one that needs to be looked into and exercised.

Any Macbook containing a SSD should be idealized as a ‘working platform’ notebook containing all your applications, documents, and weekly or bi-weekly necessary files. All collections of media files such as pictures, music, and videos, unless directly needed should be kept off the notebook and on an external hard drive or likewise. While the ‘working platform’ premise is also the case with larger internal conventional hard drives of 1TB+, its implementation isn't as critical except in terms of data protection.

Realistically, you should at most coordinate roughly 20 to 25% of your total SSD space to all audio-video personal use media (picture / music / video collections), leaving the remaining amount on an external HD.

Nobody should consider any notebook a data storage device at any time under any circumstance, rather a data creation, sending, and manipulation device; and in the case of a SSD, this is more important for purposes of having sufficient working space on the SSD and reducing SSD ‘bloat’ in which cases someone is wrongly attempting to use the SSD space as a large media storage nexus.

The rare exception to the collective usage and premise of SSD use in which a much larger SSD is truly needed are for those in video and photography professions that require both the extremely fast speeds of the SSD and the onboard storage for large and or many video and photography files. However this also falls under the premise of a ‘working platform’ for such peoples rather than the intent of many who are using the SSD as passive and static data storage for media files very infrequently needed or accessed.

All on-notebook data collections should be logically approached as to necessity, and evaluated as to whether it is active or passive data that likely doesn’t need to be on the notebook, allocations of space-percentages to as-needed work and use, apportioning space for your entertainment media, and questioning whether it should it be on the notebook for more than short-term consumption.

Considerations should be made in the mind of any user in differentiating the necessary system data (System hub) comprising the Mac OSX, applications, necessary documents that both must and should be on your internal SSD, and that of the users personal data (Data hub) comprising created files, pictures, music, videos, PDF files, data created or being created and otherwise, that likely unless being used soon or often should be parked on an external hard drive for consumption, or temporarily loading onto the internal SSD.

You both can and should purchase whichever SSD size you need or see fit, but even in the case of the largest of SSD, unless use-considerations are made, and SSD spaces are allocated as should be the case indicated above, one can easily and immediately run into this quandary of “needing more internal SSD space”, in which instance a different approach in usage must then be implemented.


However it is almost always the case, that such large media files are wanted to be stored internally rather than actually needed, in which case the external HD is both prudent as well as necessary. Additionally costs per MB are infinitely less on an external HD than an internal SSD in any consideration of data expansion needs.




A Professional Example

In the case of a Macbook Air or Macbook Pro Retina with ‘limited’ storage on the SSD, this distinction becomes more important in that in an ever rapidly increasing file-size world, you keep vital large media files, pics, video, PDF collections, music off your SSD and archived on external storage, for sake of the necessary room for your system to have free space to operate, store future applications and general workspace.


➕You should also never be put in the position of considering “deleting things” on your Macbook SSD in order to ‘make space’. This is especially what your external HD is for.

Professionals who create and import very large amounts of data have almost no change in the available space on their notebooks internal SSD because they are constantly archiving data to arrays of external or networked HD.

Or in the case of the consumer this means you keep folders for large imported or created data and you ritually offload and archive this data for safekeeping, not only to safeguard the data in case your Macbook has a SSD crash, or gets stolen, but importantly in keeping the ‘breathing room’ open for your notebook to operate, expand, create files, add applications, for your APPS to create temp files, and for general operation.



Slim USB3 1TB external hard drive

User uploaded file

External Hard Drives

External hard drives are both extremely cheap and regardless of the size of your internal SSD (or even internal hard drive if the case), you need an external hard drive with your SSD equipped Macbook for several reasons:


1. Data backup and protection.

2. Redundancy for important data.

3. Necessitated ideal space for large media files for collections of pictures, videos, and music etc.

While ever changing in price, typical portable 2.5” external hard drives in USB3 run roughly $65 for 1TB or $120 for 2TB small portable USB3 hard drives. Such drives range in thickness between 5mm and 15mm, with recent improvements in storage of 500GB drives in 5mm profiles.

There is almost no premise in which a small 12mm thick 1 Terabyte USB hard drive cannot be taken along with any Macbook as an external large storage extension inside any Macbook carry case or pouch. Typically such external HD profiles are not much bigger than a deck of cards.

External hard drives are a foregone necessity for purchase with any Macbook for at the very least Time Machine backups, data redundancies, and ideally for large media storage.

Apr 22, 2014 8:16 AM in response to PlotinusVeritas

SSD for the Air are not in the TB range.


HOW MUCH music do you need within a 2 week period? allocate 15GB to just music or so at a time, that would be quite a few 1000 songs.


External superslim HD are very small. However the "tacky" references has no bearing on anything

So that is a pile of whoppingly absurd.
a) if someone wants to upgrade they want to upgrade, your personal feelings on how much music or video they should have is irrelevant.
b) if they feel it's tacky it has full bearing as their feeling about how they want to use their laptop does matter.
I don't want to carry a second device no matter how small for basic meetings, I run a dozen clients a day, I want the content I need for them on my laptop, and I want a week of meetings stored. I don't care if you think that is unreasonble. People come here for solutions not for "you shouldn't do it that way" because I'm a tech geek that has a solution that works for me.

Apr 22, 2014 10:24 AM in response to TheJiffy

I completely agree. He didn't ask "should I" or "is it cost effective to" he asked "Is there an option?" People generally come for solutions, NOT opinons. And my updated answer is YES. You can find them on ebay, here is an example.

256gb http://www.ebay.com/itm/Apple-Samsung-256GB-SSD-for-Late-2013-MacBook-Pro-Retina -Mid-2013-Air-models-/271457130973

512gb http://www.ebay.com/itm/Apple-Samsung-512GB-SSD-for-MacBook-Pro-Air-New-Mac-Pro- Late-2013-Models-/111332446857

Apr 22, 2014 10:41 AM in response to TheJiffy


TheJiffy wrote:

1 I don't want to carry a second device no matter how small for basic meetings,
2
I run a dozen clients a day, I want the content I need for them on my laptop, and I want a week of meetings stored.

3 I don't care if you think that is unreasonble.

4 People come here for solutions not for "you shouldn't do it that way" because I'm a tech geek that has a solution that works for me.

5 if someone wants to upgrade they want to upgrade

6 and I want a week of meetings stored

1. You must have an external HD for data backups , regardless. It doesnt matter if there existed a 4TB internal SSD (which doesnt exist), external HD are an absolutely necessity for data protection.


2. What you want and what is logical to protect your data are two different things.


3. The only reasonable position as pertains computers is valuable data protection.


4. Data protection is the solution for ALL peoples and ANY peoples.


5 Anyone can upgrade their SSD, up to 512GB, as is the case.

However what is cheaper, easier, safer, and more logical is data management and protection.


6 Storing a week or two of meetings is a great premise, and having on your SSD as well. However the premise is most people try to use their internal SSD as a MASS STORAGE DEVICE , including all their pics, videos, music etc. This is both counter-intuitive to the how the SSD should be used and is a serious danger for data loss without external backups and archives.



Never consider any computer a data storage device at any time under any circumstance, rather a data creation, sending, and manipulation device. Anyone who thinks data is safe on any computer, even copied upon multiple partitions is making a mistake that will, without fail, strike.


Static data that hasnt been used in a month, or wont be needed in a month should be parked OFF the computer and onto an external HD.

This is necessary to have enough free SSD space

and secondly is necessary regardless to have external data redundancies for data protection.


You fundamentally dont understand. Research data backups and why you protect your data.

Methodology to protect your data. Backups vs. Archives. Long-term data protection

Apr 22, 2014 10:46 AM in response to PlotinusVeritas

Oh my God, will you just let it go already? Some of us who have a 128gb SSD on our Macs REALLY REALLY WANT to upgrade our drives, not to use them as a mass storage device, but to make them more practicle for daily use. Everyone's computer and storage usage is different. I would venture to say that most people have external storage devices but Apple is not necessarily keeping up with the changing tech world that REQUIRES more disk space. I bet you have an 8gb iPhone and think it's just fine too huh? Apple should NEVER EVER make another 8gb iphone, however, they do and they are practically a useless device. After the OS, it has 6gb storage. My 64gb iphone lingers around 5gb free at any given time and I suppose you'd say "I'm doing it wrong"?

Stop beating the dead horse. No one cares about your opinion as a techy, or your articles. That's what Google is for. They come here for solutions, not bandaids.

Apr 22, 2014 11:13 AM in response to Donnutt


Donnutt wrote:


They come here for solutions,


Data management is a solution

Data protection is the only solution.


All peoples who are informed, will tell you that if you care about data loss you must have an external HD (actually more than one).



Purchase the largest SSD you want / need etc. It doesn't matter as relates to necessitated data protection and backups.



As for the Ipone mention:

www.apple.com/feedback/



Peace

Apr 22, 2014 11:17 AM in response to PlotinusVeritas

External backup has nothing to do with wanting more storage, it's like saying you might as well wear a belt because when you get in a car you are going to have to wear a saftey belt.
I have an external HD, I back up I don't want to carry it with me. If I lose a day of data I could care less vs the hassel.
Protecting my data has nothing to do with wanting more onboard storage.
Cheaper doesn't matter nearly as much as convienence to me. Easier is more storage, safer is a backup drive that won't get lost becuase it's small and easy to leave behind.
A day of data can easily run me 80gb get over the idea that what you think is normal matters.

Apr 22, 2014 11:29 AM in response to TheJiffy

Purchase the largest SSD you want / need etc.


A 1TB superslim HD is 9.5mm thick


If you're packing your charger with you in travels, in your bag; ... there is absolutely no excuse not to also pack a very tiny slim HD with you.

User uploaded file




TheJiffy wrote:


Easier is more storage, safer is a backup drive that won't get lost becuase it's small and easy to leave behind.

What is easy usually is not what is safe.

If youre losing things thats another issue.

losing a portable HD is why you always need a secondary (at minimum) redundant archive to the portable (or non-portable) backup drive.


Data protection begins at...

1. All data on the computer is just that, your data.

2. All data on the first external HD is your backup. -- (the portable potentially 'lost' HD)

3. Only the second external HD is your first safe data redundancy.

User uploaded file

Protected data redundancy begins at the second external copy due to:

1. It not being connected. Any drive connected, backup or otherwise, is not to be considered a safe data redundancy.

2. Being the backup failsafe to the first external HD, not to the data on the computer which never should be counted in terms of data protection as "a copy".

3. External drives will invariably fail, and since most people falsely believe their external HD is their "safety", this error of perspective must be countered by yet another external copy of ones data.



With such a plan in place, if you accidentally lose your portable HD, you have your at-home redundancy in place.


However while traveling, uploading to a remote server is a wiser choice, as such if you lose your portable, you have your at home redundancy, AND all your data created during travels on the remote server.

Can we upgrade hard disk to bigger hard disk space for Macbook Air?

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