One note for my machine OWC recommends getting the 3G (SATA II) drive rather than a 6G (SATA III) as due to some quirk an OWC 6G drive will fall back to 1.5G speeds rather than 3G. I bought 8gb (4gb x 2) corsair DDR3 1333MHz ram (that was defected and now being replaced) Here are my. Unlike earlier MacBook Air models that require one to remove the bottom plate of the notebook and the battery before accessing the storage, the 'Late 2010' and 'Mid-2011' models have the SSD module. I recently just bought 8gb of ram and now I want to replace the hard drive and swap the optical bay out for another hdd or SSD. These upgrades are available in 120 GB, 240 GB, and 360 GB capacities and fit in all of these 11-Inch and 13-Inch models. As a development machine this SSD has put new life into the old girl and saved me quite a nice chunck of change over getting a new machine. currently I have a 13' mid-2010 MacBook pro base model.
MID 2010 MACBOOK PRO SSD DRIVE REPLACEMT WINDOWS
The SSD is my boot device and main device while the hard drive is my media drive, movies, music, as well as the virtual Windows drive using Parallels. MacBook Pro 13' Unibody Mid 2010 parts for DIY repair. I did this because I have some long ago memory of reading somewhere, perhaps in error, that the sudden motion sensor won't signal a hard drive in the optical bay in the case of an event. I pulled out the DVD drive that I never used and installed an SSD drive. He writes: I have a 2010 15-inch MacBook Pro. I setup the SSD in the old optical bay and left my 1TB Toshiba hard drive in the hard drive bay. Reader Ted Gresham’s older MacBook Pro is misbehaving. I went into the Apple Store, and as it turns out, I need a new Press J to jump to the feed. For those who do not know this is a metal frame that allows a standard size 2.5" disk or SSD to be used in place of the optical drive, which in my case no longer was able to read many media disks anyway. I have a mid-2010 15-inch MacBook Pro with an i7 processor that recently died on me. FWIW, I got the SSD with the "Data Doubler" from Macsales.