Upgrade Your PS3 Hard Drive (lol H4X)

DBloke

An ancient one, banner of over a thousand acunts
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May 30, 2006
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Super Mancyland
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Well heres something for you PS3 owning people/things


http://kotaku.com/gaming/howto/upgrade-your-ps3-hard-drive-326750.php
One of the neatest features of the Playstation 3, in my book, is that you can swap out the hard drive it comes with yourself using an off-the-shelf hard drive. Sure it may be pretty self-explanatory to some, but not everyone knows how to upgrade the hard drive on their Playstation 3. Fortunately, Seagate was kind enough to send me a little howto guide and kit. The guide walks you through the relatively painless process for upgrading your 40GB or 80GB hard drive to something roomier, like say a 160GB drive.
The upgrade allows you to swap out the built-in drive with a new one, without losing any of your content. Why is Seagate explaining how to upgrade a Playstation 3? Because they sell hard drives silly. Hit the jump for the even-Brian-can-do-it instructions.
What you need:
An external hard drive for the backup (Seagate suggests their Maxtor OneTouch Mini)
A new hard drive (Seagate suggests their Momentus 5400.3 160GB (~$120) or a Momentus 7200.2 160GB (~$160).)
Mini screwdriver
How to do it:
Plug in your external drive and reformat it so the PS3 will recognize it.
Copy current PS3 hard drive content to your external drive.
Remove the standard issue console drive, following the installation instructions in the PS3 manual.
Replace the console drive with a the new drive.
Format new drive.
Plug in external drive and transfer content to the new drive.
Play Uncharted.
 
nice find...think ill wait though till divx is supported.
 
Bliss said:
nice find...think ill wait though till divx is supported.

Why would you wanna support Divx? It's ASP. No one likes ASP. You can compress the files with Quicktime or x264 or something.

As for the HDD... the instructions are in the manual. I even removed it and stuck it in my MacPro. I was hopping to use dd to make an exact duplicate. The data is all encrypted. I haven't a clue what filesystem it uses or is based on. Probably not FAT though...
 

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