That depends on your computer. If you have a small form factor chassis then most likely it will not have room for a secondary hard drive. Most PCs, however, will accomodate at least 2 hard disk drives. It is relatively simple to install. After you've installed the drive in your PC, hook up the data and power cables. Turn the computer on, right click on My Computer (assuming WinXP) and then go to Manage. Under Storage you should see Disk Management. Right click on Disk 1 and create a partition. Format it as NTFS and assign it a drive letter. Another much easier option would be to purchase an external hard drive that uses USB2.0. All you should have to do is plug it in to a USB port on your computer and start using it. This is very handy for transferring large files between multiple computers. It's also great for backing up all that important music and porn. Hope this helps!
2007-07-13 12:12:43
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answer #1
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answered by Jeff L 2
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Absolutely you can have at least 2 hard drives on any PC. And potentially more than 2 if you like. Simply go to a Best Buy or similar store and ask one of the salespeople to point you in the right direction. If you are confident with a screwdriver and reading than you should have no problem. If not so handy most tech stores will do the install for a nominal fee.
GL
2007-07-13 12:13:52
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answer #2
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answered by mikedh311 2
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Yes it should be possible to have two hard drives in one PC.
However, you have to establish whether they are P-ATA (parallel) or S-ATA (serial) hard drives. P-ATA use 40 pin ribbon cables and one drive has to be set as the master and the other as the slave. There is a jumper position between the 40 pin cable socket and the 4 pin power cable. Usually uou have to remove the jumper to make the hard drive a slave.
Once the drives are installed your BIOS should auto-detect the second drive. When Windows loads it should detect you second drive and install a driver for it.
2007-07-13 12:11:57
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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this is possible. in actuality, in case you have sufficient room on your case you have all 3 drives put in on a similar time. the reason he put in yet another force became into to grant you get admission to on your data. The crash became into possibly application appropriate (corrupted abode windows setting up), no longer hardware, and the force will paintings super as quickly as this is been formatted and the OS has been reinstalled. As for a thank you to place in a perplexing force, a link to a video academic decrease than. determine you place your important hard disk (the single you like besides off) to grasp and the different(s) to slave with the jumpers at the back of the force close to the place the cables bypass in. There are often stickers depicting a thank you to try this on the perplexing force itself.
2016-10-01 13:35:37
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, but the number of IDE devices depends on the main board, type, age, model, manufacturer. If you are talking about ATA you can have different combinations of 4 drives, ex. 2 HDD and 2CD/DVD, or 3 HDD and 1 CD/DVD.
With SATA HDDs is little bit different but again it depends on your main board, mainly
You should connect it to your main board, set in BIOS "AUTO DETECT HDD" and that should be it. Best of luck
2007-07-13 12:14:28
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answer #5
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answered by firebolt 2
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its possible and very easy. its called an external hd. i had 3 hard drives, about 1TB and 150 GB total.
go to your local computer store (staples or office depot will do)
and ask about it.
its easy - a simple USB connection...
and LACIE would be the best for this, if you decide on doing it.
2007-07-13 12:12:01
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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yes, it's very handy!
Here's a lot more information on how-to!
http://tech.yahoo.com/gd/upgrading-your-pc-prepare-for-a-new-hard-drive/166354
2007-07-13 12:12:20
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answer #7
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answered by Josh W 2
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just install it, and the computer will automatically find it.
2007-07-13 12:07:44
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answer #8
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answered by Jake 7
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