

Thanks for taking the time to read this long question and for any answers you can give to help me.CERTAIN CONTENT THAT APPEARS ON THIS SITE COMES FROM AMAZON SERVICES LLC. But can I remove it and connect it internally to a Win 7 or Win 8 machine and have it recognize the drive and be able to read all its data correctly? Or is there any other way, by reformatting the drive or something else, before using it the first time, to insure that I will later be able to remove it from the case and connect it to a Windows machine without losing the data? I’m sure I can’t just take the drive out and connect it internally to a Win XP machine. **But most of all I’d like to be able to recover the data when the enclosure eventually fails. Is the drive inside built to run for as many hours as an internal drive? Do you know the model number of drive inside? Is it just an internal drive that is put in the enclosure or is it a drive built special for internal enclosures. If this is the case, then it seems that not even removing the drive from the case and connecting it to a Win 7 machine will work to allow the data to be read correctly.Ĭan you clarify the above concerning the sector sizes, the partition type, and the function of the interface board and explain the internal workings of this drive? I’d also like to understand how it can with both Win XP and Win 7. Furthermore, I assume there is some proprietary translation by the interface in the external drive that allows it to work with Win XP to surpass the 2GB limit when using mbr partitions with 512k byte sectors. So I can’t just remove it and connect it internally to Win XP and expect it to work. I assume the new Elements has inside a 4K drive with a GUID partition. However, the newer drives, including this WD 3TB Elements are different. Even if it’s in the first year I will still lose the data if you exchange or fix the drive under warranty.Īll my previous external drives used the standard 512k byte sectors and were made before the newer 4K byte sector drives, so I was able to just remove the drives from the enclosure and connect them internally to a Win XP machine with no problems. I expect that my new WD 3TB External Hard drive will fail at some point, too. Sometimes that was enough, other times I could run recover software and then they would work ok again.

However, I was able to remove the hard drives and connect them internally or in a caddy to use them further.

It was always a problem with the case/interface failing and causing the drive to prevent the system from booting, becoming unreadable or corrupting some data. I have had external drives before and they all failed at some point.
