Jump to content

2TB HDD Upgrade for your PS4


ThermoNukePanda

Recommended Posts

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00ILALU9G/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1

 

So this is a pretty damn good deal and after reading a recent article that was testing it out they found it's actually better and faster than the stock HDD on the PS4. 

 

The only thing is that it's within an enclosure, so you'll need a knife or small flathead screwdriver to remove the enclosure, but within it is a standard 9.5mm drive that will work fantastic.

 

I'm purchased it and am going to upgrade later this week and take the drive from my PS4 and put in in my old PS3 (launch fat model and still kicking!!)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I replaced my old ps3 with a hybrid 500 gb Seagate momentus xt. Worked like a dream with a few caveats. The file structure had to be changed to fat32 and anything associated with the drive i.e. movies purchased through sony didnt work right. Not sure if ps4 will have same issues.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Apparently the PS4 is just plug and play pretty much. 

 

https://support.us.playstation.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/5107/~/upgrade-ps4-hdd    (Direct Sony link about upgrading)

 

http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/digitalfoundry-2014-how-to-cheaply-upgrade-your-ps4-to-2tb   (Article where I found the 2TB drive along with speed tests)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

And here I am with my original 20gb 360 drive.

 

Yeah, but your 360 doesn't require like 20-50+gb game installs for just about every game.  That 500gb that comes with the system (of which only about 400 is available) gets used up REALLY friggin fast.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah, but your 360 doesn't require like 20-50+gb game installs for just about every game.  That 500gb that comes with the system (of which only about 400 is available) gets used up REALLY friggin fast.

 

 

Halo 4 would eat 8gb alone as well as GTAV.

 

 

So there goes 16gb of my 20 on 2 games alone. If I wanted to play skyrim and/or BL2 with DLC, i'd have to uninstall of of the previous 2 to make room.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah I know what you mean.  I think CoD:Ghosts is like 49gb on my system alone, and I already own a bunch of games.  Then start throwing in all the free to play games like Warframe and Way Thunder, and downloadable games and your disk is full.  That's why the 2TB is definitely a necessary upgrade.  The one i linked to was only like $88 which is a pretty sweet deal.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah I know what you mean.  I think CoD:Ghosts is like 49gb on my system alone, and I already own a bunch of games.  Then start throwing in all the free to play games like Warframe and Way Thunder, and downloadable games and your disk is full.  That's why the 2TB is definitely a necessary upgrade.  The one i linked to was only like $88 which is a pretty sweet deal.

 

 

Would it be crazy for me to wish that new console run on standard HDD found in stores, you know, like how PCs run.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Would it be crazy for me to wish that new console run on standard HDD found in stores, you know, like how PCs run.

 

The PS4 does though.... runs on a standard laptop size HDD really.  You just plug it in, insert your USB with the system software and you're good.  It's not proprietary like the Xbox is.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The PS4 does though.... runs on a standard laptop size HDD really.  You just plug it in, insert your USB with the system software and you're good.  It's not proprietary like the Xbox is.

 

 

That's nice to know. Kinda sucked that the 360 can't do that, especially the old models.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah, it's a great feature for the Sony systems (PS3 could do it also).  I'm pretty sure that the new Xbone can also upgrade it's hard drive in a similar fashion, I'd have to look however.

 

 

Apparently you can but not easy.

http://www.geek.com/games/you-can-replace-the-xbox-one-hard-drive-but-its-hard-1577953/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

Not only that, but doing the upgrade apparently voids your warranty completely with MS (which is friggin stupid). 

 

Sony actually encourages upgrading the HDD.  MS wants you to never open the system.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not only that, but doing the upgrade apparently voids your warranty completely with MS (which is friggin stupid). 

 

Sony actually encourages upgrading the HDD.  MS wants you to never open the system.

 

 

Here's to the the list of reasons why I went towards PC.

 

If you ship something to me with a terrible *IMO* storage capacity and a void warranty if I want to upgrade, then good bye.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

They do make good products but still not getting a "next-gen" console.

Not after spending nearly 2k on an entire new rig.

 

Well yeah, 2k on a rig is going to obviously perform a heck of a lot better than a $350 console lol.  But for the money there is a hell of a lot of perfomance they squeeze out of those things, not to mention it's still within it's first year life cycle.  Look at the release games for PS3, versus something like Last of Us.  It's astonding. 

 

 

Anyways, new HDD should be arriving today.  Now I just have to carefully pry it out of the enclosure and hopefully don't fuck anything up lol.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The surgery was a success.  Was a little nervewracking cracking open that enclosure for the drive that I ordered, but it wasn't too bad.  Took all of about 15 minutes total.  Soooooo happy with the extra space, and I notice a slight speed increase in loading times with the new drive.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Bet it would be great to stick in a SSD in a PS4. It is nice to be able to upgrade the hard drive in a Playstation.

 

Looking at the various actual testing for load speed times on the SSD's vs a regular drive, I honestly felt the incredibly few seconds that were gained were totally not worth the extreme extra investment. 

 

As for the hybrid drive, also it seemed pretty comparable to the regular drives as well, only gaining a few seconds and only after using it for awhile so the flash memory (hybrid part) could recognize what was being accessed most. 

 

I also stayed with the 5400 RPM drive to stay in line with heat and such within the device since that was what it was built for originally.  Plus the 2TB has super dense platters and when tested actually performed faster than the smaller ones originally tested.

 

*shrugs*  Your mileage may vary I suppose, and if you have the money to blow on a huge SSD then go for it.  :D  I wanted a ton of space and stay within budget and I'm not disappointed!  :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...