The Quantum Fireball EX came in a range of sizes in multiples of 3.2 depending on the number of platters. The smallest was 3.2gb, and the largest was 12.7gb with four platters.
It is 13.7GB unformatted, or roughly 12,860MB after formatting.
9 gb
8,4 GB
Hard drives do not require drivers.
Sure as long as you have a molex (white peripheral) power connector and an extra IDE connection available you should be good to go. Although these old fireball series seem to be notorious for degrading magnetic sectors after time.
You do the proper research and stop trying to get people to do your homework for you.
6448 megabytes, or 6.4 gigabytes. Less capacity than most USB thumb drives these days. 12/15/2011
No. Hard drives do not need specific drivers. Instructions are sent to them via the disk controller, which most operating systems should have a driver for.
Yes, the Quantum Tape Ultrium Drive is very easy to install. You just connect the drive to your computer using a 68-pin Ultra160 SCSI cable.
Hard drives are really good protected, you can damage if you are shaking a hard drive extrimely hard. The travel hard drive series made using special technologies and it's not that easy to damage them. It's unlikey that your hard drive was damaged by airport security machines. You could break if you have dropped it.
Hard drives can be purchased from eBay for reasonably cheap, about £35. However, if the person was unable to replace the hard drive themselves, there would be an charge for fitting the hard drive which would vary from company to company.
Both have areas of misunderstanding that makes them hard. Quantum is harder in that the quaternion foundation of quantum physic is essential but no recognized.
Inarguably, Trancend's 25M series...rugged, stylish and great performer.
A series of Fujitsu Hard drives; e.g. the MAN3735MC, a 73.5GB SCSI drive.
a hard drive failure is when your hard drive stops working...