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#1 |
Power Member
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Hey gang, I am preparing to upgrade my PS3 60G to 500GB but first I have a few questions/concerns. I've done a ton of research and have noticed, as one will when doing research, that there are varying opinions. So I want to get some "facts". Please offer fact that you know proven to be true. I want this upgrade to go right.
1. OK, first research I did was backing up my saved game data. Is it true that you only need to save the game's "saved data" and not the "game data" itself. My understanding is that you can fit all the save data on the thumb drive but saving everything would take a bit more room which essentially would not fit on a thumb drive. I understand that the rest of the material you can reload later like themes, PS HOME, game data, music, etc. 2. Some game save info will not transfer if you change PSN ID's. Is this true? 3. I've read opinions that you should not upgrade more than 2X the HD already installed. In other words if you have a 60GB PS3 than you should not upgrade to over 120 because of heating/noise issues? Is this true? These are just a few questions I can think of. Installation seems simple but again I want to make sure that once I take the drive out and format a new one that it was done right. According to what I'm reading once you format and install a new HD that it you can never go back to the old one even for reference without reformatting it. Thanks for any help. ![]() |
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#2 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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2. I believe so, some games that have online components may not work with different PSN ID's. I've never tried personally, but I've heard this before as well. 3. No that's not true. You can upgrade to whatever size you want. Heat may become an issue when upgrading the SPEED that the HdD spins at (ie: standard 5400rpm or the faster 7200rpm), but even then many people have used 7200rpm hard drives in their PS3 without any problem. Size doesn't make a difference though. |
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#3 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I would highly recommend you use the backup utility on the PS3 to back up your stuff. You'll need an external drive formatted in FAT32, though. |
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#4 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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In fact, I may be wrong but I think that you cannot copy game data from an external HDD to an internal one, that would make for a very easy way to share DLC otherwise. |
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#5 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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And yes, you can redownload all your stuff, but that's a waste of time if you have the means to just make backups. |
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#6 |
Member
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If you can get a big enough external drive, I would and do the backup/restore option. Though I have to say, I had a problem restoring mine when I swapped it and lost most of my save/game data.
Some games it doesn't matter to and others it does. My Little Big Planet and Prince of Persia data could not be used, while some other games such as Pixeljunk Monsters and Tekken5 worked fine. The ID is the key, as long as you keep it the same when you install the new drive the save data should be fine. It is not your PSN id, it is your user account on the machine itself. I went with a 5400 RPM because I got it cheap (Seagate 250, $65). Going with a 7200 essentially just gets you somewhat faster access, but significant benefits are minimal. Just get a QUALITY drive and you won't have issues. |
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#7 | |
Power Member
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Still can't believe how much room PS HOME TAKES up. I had to erase some game data to make space for it. |
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#8 | |
Active Member
Jul 2008
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I would personally stick to Seagate. Their 5 year warranty (longest in the industry) is an excellent and credible signal of quality. And this may be anecdotal evidence, but I've had nothing but good experiences with them in 10 years of building computers, raid configurations and all. Western Digital is pretty good too, although I got a DOA drive from them once. Remember hard drives, because of their moving parts, are the most likely thing to break in computers. Try www.newegg.com sometimes they're cheaper than amazon Last edited by Seeking_Alpha; 01-06-2009 at 10:36 PM. |
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#9 | |
The Busey
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(waits for a PS3 laser joke) |
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