Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
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evil_ash_xero
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Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
I got a new HDD docking station, and I went to put my PS2 HDD in it and smoke started to come out of it. Great.
I put it in the older docking station, and it no longer registers.
So... I need a new one. Can someone tell me where I can get this one "new", or close to it?
The only good thing is that I backed up all the games on it, a while back.
I put it in the older docking station, and it no longer registers.
So... I need a new one. Can someone tell me where I can get this one "new", or close to it?
The only good thing is that I backed up all the games on it, a while back.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
With the proper adapters you can put almost anything into a PS2. SATA drives including SSDs, Compact Flash or SD cards. If you want the same 500gb capacity maybe a SATA SSD would be best. These start at like $50 and an IDE to SATA adapter isn't expensive either.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
If you value networking and have the correct torx bit(s) to disassemble the network adapter, you can swap the IDE interface board with one of these SATA interface boards. I've purchased from that specific seller in February of last year, and the board I received has given me zero problems since.
If you don't value networking or you don't want to mod your network adapter, you can get an unbranded SATA network adapter from eBay or AliExpress for about the same price; just know that the network ports in those are mockups and nonfunctional.
If you don't value networking or you don't want to mod your network adapter, you can get an unbranded SATA network adapter from eBay or AliExpress for about the same price; just know that the network ports in those are mockups and nonfunctional.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
$19, brand new, 250gb, no adapters needed:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000Y ... UTF8&psc=1
I'm sure you can find larger if you want, but the 50x games I have loaded on three different PS2's (all with the above HDD) only take up 155gb so still a decent amount of space left.
I used these same HDD's on my 2x OG Xbox's and ~2 years later they still seem to be perfect.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000Y ... UTF8&psc=1
I'm sure you can find larger if you want, but the 50x games I have loaded on three different PS2's (all with the above HDD) only take up 155gb so still a decent amount of space left.
I used these same HDD's on my 2x OG Xbox's and ~2 years later they still seem to be perfect.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
Those PATA Maxtor disks, while easy to just drop in with original equipment, have proven, in my experience, to be noisy and slow to initialize, and PATA equipment is becoming more scarce as time goes on.Dochartaigh wrote:$19, brand new, 250gb, no adapters needed:
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000Y ... UTF8&psc=1
I'm sure you can find larger if you want, but the 50x games I have loaded on three different PS2's (all with the above HDD) only take up 155gb so still a decent amount of space left.
I used these same HDD's on my 2x OG Xbox's and ~2 years later they still seem to be perfect.
Once I modded my network adapter for SATA and stuck in a 3.5" SATA disk, even one from 10 years ago, I couldn't hear the disk, and HDD initialization felt quicker.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
What's "HDD initialization"? How fast it boots up, or how fast it'll load a game in the menu? I haven't measured the boot-up speed or anything, but loading a game (through open ps2 loader) it immediate shows the couple solid colored screens then the game launches.nmalinoski wrote: Those PATA Maxtor disks, while easy to just drop in with original equipment, have proven, in my experience, to be noisy and slow to initialize, and PATA equipment is becoming more scarce as time goes on.
Once I modded my network adapter for SATA and stuck in a 3.5" SATA disk, even one from 10 years ago, I couldn't hear the disk, and HDD initialization felt quicker.
My OG Xbox's already have fan noise, PS2's I haven't noticed much noise from (but the TV's always have noise from the game on, usually at a pretty low level though...and my switcher ALWAYS has fans on...so I'm not the best example for a perfectly quiet room lol).
These are definitely old tech though, with that older connector for sure.
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maxtherabbit
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
I still happily use IDE drives in my PS2, how long the drive takes to spin up really means jack shit to me
There are a ton of cheap IDE drives on ebay
There are a ton of cheap IDE drives on ebay
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
I looked into the sata route recently and decided to stick with a 3.5" pata drive out of convenience.
The later, higher capacity models spin up quickly enough and the acoustic management on them can be very good. They're a world away from the old boneshakers you had in your pentium 2 pc
The later, higher capacity models spin up quickly enough and the acoustic management on them can be very good. They're a world away from the old boneshakers you had in your pentium 2 pc
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evil_ash_xero
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
Thanks for all the advice.
I do have a couple more questions. I wasn't the one who set up the HDD and card. I'm not sure what I have to do exactly, to get the HDD to be formatted for PS2 use. I know how to put games on it.
Will I have to do the whole thing over, since it will be a new drive? I'm not sure what to do with the card. It has all the software on it, but maybe it won't work with a new HDD?
Advice?
Also, the system is chipped, if anyone was wondering.
I do have a couple more questions. I wasn't the one who set up the HDD and card. I'm not sure what I have to do exactly, to get the HDD to be formatted for PS2 use. I know how to put games on it.
Will I have to do the whole thing over, since it will be a new drive? I'm not sure what to do with the card. It has all the software on it, but maybe it won't work with a new HDD?
Advice?
Also, the system is chipped, if anyone was wondering.
My Collection: http://www.rfgeneration.com/cgi-bin/col ... Collection
Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
You can burn what you need, but easiest way should be to just get a McBoot Memory card. It has all the tools ready to set up the hard drive.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
I followed the below tutorial. I honestly just didn't want to be bothered with having to buy a FreeMcBoot memory card, having to leave it plugged in, or having to find out how to make the HDD boot up with FMB instead. This basically shows you how to format the HDD, then you put a HDD image right onto it which has FMB and ALL the programs you would ever want to run on your PS2 to do pretty much anything. I used their older image but it looks like they updated it recently:evil_ash_xero wrote:I do have a couple more questions. I wasn't the one who set up the HDD and card. I'm not sure what I have to do exactly, to get the HDD to be formatted for PS2 use. I know how to put games on it.
Will I have to do the whole thing over, since it will be a new drive? I'm not sure what to do with the card. It has all the software on it, but maybe it won't work with a new HDD?
http://www.ps2-home.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=5208
My only problem was my pesky Windows 10 computer - it didn't like either of my two old HDD external readers, so I literally could only do this on my Mac running Windows 10 Bootcamp (which for some reason Windows ALWAYS runs better on my Macs than on an actual PC Most others seem to have zero problems.
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evil_ash_xero
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
Now, the fellow did make a card for me that has Free McBoot on it. I just was wondering if when I set the hard drive up, if I'll have to do something different?Fudoh wrote:You can burn what you need, but easiest way should be to just get a McBoot Memory card. It has all the tools ready to set up the hard drive.
I guess I'll ask more specific questions, if I have any problems, once the HDD comes in next week.
My Collection: http://www.rfgeneration.com/cgi-bin/col ... Collection
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evil_ash_xero
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
I did have to do some of this before. It's just been a while.Dochartaigh wrote:I followed the below tutorial. I honestly just didn't want to be bothered with having to buy a FreeMcBoot memory card, having to leave it plugged in, or having to find out how to make the HDD boot up with FMB instead. This basically shows you how to format the HDD, then you put a HDD image right onto it which has FMB and ALL the programs you would ever want to run on your PS2 to do pretty much anything. I used their older image but it looks like they updated it recently:evil_ash_xero wrote:I do have a couple more questions. I wasn't the one who set up the HDD and card. I'm not sure what I have to do exactly, to get the HDD to be formatted for PS2 use. I know how to put games on it.
Will I have to do the whole thing over, since it will be a new drive? I'm not sure what to do with the card. It has all the software on it, but maybe it won't work with a new HDD?
http://www.ps2-home.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=32&t=5208
My only problem was my pesky Windows 10 computer - it didn't like either of my two old HDD external readers, so I literally could only do this on my Mac running Windows 10 Bootcamp (which for some reason Windows ALWAYS runs better on my Macs than on an actual PC Most others seem to have zero problems.
This should be super helpful. Thanks.
My Collection: http://www.rfgeneration.com/cgi-bin/col ... Collection
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
FreeMcBoot doesn't have any dependency on the hard disk; you should be able to see this by popping it into slot 2 (probably works in slot 1, too; it's been a while) and powering on the PS2. If the card has FreeMcBoot correctly installed, it should have FreeMcBoot labeling during the boot sequence and on the root system menu.evil_ash_xero wrote:Now, the fellow did make a card for me that has Free McBoot on it. I just was wondering if when I set the hard drive up, if I'll have to do something different?Fudoh wrote:You can burn what you need, but easiest way should be to just get a McBoot Memory card. It has all the tools ready to set up the hard drive.
I guess I'll ask more specific questions, if I have any problems, once the HDD comes in next week.
As for formatting the new hard disk, if you just want to go the HDL/OPL route without any of the HDD ODSYS/FreeHdBoot stuff, you can connect the disk to your PC and use WinHIIP to format and install games (You can also use HDL_dumb/HDL_dump, but these have not been as reliable/robust for me as WinHIIP has been).
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
A spare MC with FMB (loads faster than FHB, but FHB is not a bad option), a SATA adapter for up to 2 TB HDD (a 3.5 one is fine), and OPL are the only way to go. Don't waste time thinking about anything else.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
Except loading over SMB shares on a network. Because that works fantastic.fernan1234 wrote:A spare MC with FMB (loads faster than FHB, but FHB is not a bad option), a SATA adapter for up to 2 TB HDD (a 3.5 one is fine), and OPL are the only way to go. Don't waste time thinking about anything else.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
I haven't tried it but last time I looked into it there were reports of inferior compatibility compared to HDD. For HDD once you load it up you're done for good, in the long run it's just much more convenient.DejahThoris wrote:Except loading over SMB shares on a network. Because that works fantastic.fernan1234 wrote:A spare MC with FMB (loads faster than FHB, but FHB is not a bad option), a SATA adapter for up to 2 TB HDD (a 3.5 one is fine), and OPL are the only way to go. Don't waste time thinking about anything else.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
It's neither more or less convenient. I turn on my PS2, pick a game and it plays. Same as your setup. Nothing else needed.fernan1234 wrote:I haven't tried it but last time I looked into it there were reports of inferior compatibility compared to HDD. For HDD once you load it up you're done for good, in the long run it's just much more convenient.DejahThoris wrote:Except loading over SMB shares on a network. Because that works fantastic.fernan1234 wrote:A spare MC with FMB (loads faster than FHB, but FHB is not a bad option), a SATA adapter for up to 2 TB HDD (a 3.5 one is fine), and OPL are the only way to go. Don't waste time thinking about anything else.
The biggest plus to the network loading is that the games can be put on a raid setup, where as if you rely solely on an internal drive and it dies then you need to hunt down a bunch of PS2 games again.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
True, but whatever storage you have your games in is technically vulnerable to failure. Since my PS2 collection is large I keep a backup in another drive anyway. I can see the network setup being more convenient for some, but I think greater compatibility is really the main advantage of the HDD way.DejahThoris wrote:It's neither more or less convenient. I turn on my PS2, pick a game and it plays. Same as your setup. Nothing else needed.
The biggest plus to the network loading is that the games can be put on a raid setup, where as if you rely solely on an internal drive and it dies then you need to hunt down a bunch of PS2 games again.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
I WANT FreeMcBoot to have dependency on the HDD though. It's easier for me to have FMB installed directly on the HDD itself (which is screwed into the PS2 and going nowhere) instead of loaded on a removable memory card, 3x of them actually for the 3x PS2's I run. Doesn't bother me if it takes a couple seconds longer for FMB to load off the HDD instead of a memory cardnmalinoski wrote:FreeMcBoot doesn't have any dependency on the hard disk; you should be able to see this by popping it into slot 2 (probably works in slot 1, too; it's been a while) and powering on the PS2. If the card has FreeMcBoot correctly installed, it should have FreeMcBoot labeling during the boot sequence and on the root system menu.
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
I don't think this is an appropriate comparison, because the storage method of your game archive (or whether you have one) and how you load games are two separate concepts. In addition to the approaches you listed, you could easily load games over the network from a single disc, or you could keep your archive on an array or a single disk, and load games from an internal hard disk in the PS2.DejahThoris wrote:The biggest plus to the network loading is that the games can be put on a raid setup, where as if you rely solely on an internal drive and it dies then you need to hunt down a bunch of PS2 games again.
Same goes for using ESR or a TEST PS2 for playing burns--you could use an array, a single disk, or have no backups at all.
I'm probably being an ass here, but it's confusing when you refer to FreeHdBoot as FreeMcBoot, because I'm under the impression that, although they achieve the same goal (aftermarket ODSYS), they're not the same; FHDB is what you want if you want to boot from the HDD (or you have a TEST PS2), and FMCB is what you want when you want to boot from the memory card (or can't boot from HDD, as with slim PS2s).Dochartaigh wrote:I WANT FreeMcBoot to have dependency on the HDD though. It's easier for me to have FMB installed directly on the HDD itself (which is screwed into the PS2 and going nowhere) instead of loaded on a removable memory card, 3x of them actually for the 3x PS2's I run. Doesn't bother me if it takes a couple seconds longer for FMB to load off the HDD instead of a memory cardnmalinoski wrote:FreeMcBoot doesn't have any dependency on the hard disk; you should be able to see this by popping it into slot 2 (probably works in slot 1, too; it's been a while) and powering on the PS2. If the card has FreeMcBoot correctly installed, it should have FreeMcBoot labeling during the boot sequence and on the root system menu.
Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
Jeez, doesn't anybody burn old fashioned discs any more?
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
I honestly don't know what the proper name is. Just know it's on my hard drive, automatically loads when I hit the power button, and the Free McBoot logo comes up while it's booting (which could very well say "FreeHDBoot" instead of "FreeMcBoot" and I just never noticed that slight differencenmalinoski wrote:I'm probably being an ass here, but it's confusing when you refer to FreeHdBoot as FreeMcBoot, because I'm under the impression that, although they achieve the same goal (aftermarket ODSYS), they're not the same
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
I'd rather burn the PS2 itself and be done with the whole thing.ldeveraux wrote:Jeez, doesn't anybody burn old fashioned discs any more?
Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
There's a joke in there that just went over my head. Do you mean that you'd rather just toss everything on the HDD and be done with it?fernan1234 wrote:I'd rather burn the PS2 itself and be done with the whole thing.ldeveraux wrote:Jeez, doesn't anybody burn old fashioned discs any more?
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
He probably just doesn't like the console. In my opinion, its worst offense is probably being a console with 480i as the only video mode for most of its games. At least for the games I play, I'm finding these days that the Xbox versions are superior, in that they almost all support 480p and have 5.1 surround from TOSLINK, where the PS2 versions only supported 480i and 2.0 from TOSLINK.ldeveraux wrote:There's a joke in there that just went over my head. Do you mean that you'd rather just toss everything on the HDD and be done with it?fernan1234 wrote:I'd rather burn the PS2 itself and be done with the whole thing.ldeveraux wrote:Jeez, doesn't anybody burn old fashioned discs any more?
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
The PS2 is one of my favorite consoles. What I dislike are discs, especially having to burn them myself. So as much as I like the system I probably wouldn't play it much if burned discs were the only option. Thank heaven we don't have to. Also 480i is fine, even on a flat screen as long as it's in the right conditions. But if not, we're also lucky that a lot of games can be forced to 480p.nmalinoski wrote:He probably just doesn't like the console. In my opinion, its worst offense is probably being a console with 480i as the only video mode for most of its games. At least for the games I play, I'm finding these days that the Xbox versions are superior, in that they almost all support 480p and have 5.1 surround from TOSLINK, where the PS2 versions only supported 480i and 2.0 from TOSLINK.
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maxtherabbit
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
I do, happilyldeveraux wrote:Jeez, doesn't anybody burn old fashioned discs any more?
I love burning CDs/DVDs
Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
Well you and I disagree then. I'd much rather have a mostly-permanent copy of a game than risk a HDD going south for no reason. It's good to have backups too, but I don't mind the disc, especially considering what happened to Emuparadise et al.fernan1234 wrote:The PS2 is one of my favorite consoles. What I dislike are discs, especially having to burn them myself. So as much as I like the system I probably wouldn't play it much if burned discs were the only option. Thank heaven we don't have to. Also 480i is fine, even on a flat screen as long as it's in the right conditions. But if not, we're also lucky that a lot of games can be forced to 480p.nmalinoski wrote:He probably just doesn't like the console. In my opinion, its worst offense is probably being a console with 480i as the only video mode for most of its games. At least for the games I play, I'm finding these days that the Xbox versions are superior, in that they almost all support 480p and have 5.1 surround from TOSLINK, where the PS2 versions only supported 480i and 2.0 from TOSLINK.
Also, wasn't 480p just becoming a thing in 2000 when the PS2 was released? IIRC, the XBOX came out a year later which would help explain the upgraded video support.
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maxtherabbit
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Re: Need a new PS2 HDD. Help.
dreamcast came out before the PS2, and over 95% of its library supports 480pldeveraux wrote: Also, wasn't 480p just becoming a thing in 2000 when the PS2 was released? IIRC, the XBOX came out a year later which would help explain the upgraded video support.