Stephen Hall
September 21st, 2011, 12:08 PM
I tried once before to convert the drive in my R4 Pro to an IDE SSD and the unit wouldn't boot. So, I switched back to the original hard disk. But the drive was several years old and I started to worry about hard-disk failure due to age. I also don't like treating it like a carton of eggs on-set. I worry when I do following shots with the bag (and recorder) moving around.
So, I researched a way to connect IDE 2.5" notebook drive interfaces to some other solid state medium. I found this IDE to dual compact flash adapter from a company called Best Connectivity on Amazon. I also bought a 32 GB compact flash card - 400X - the uplift wasn't that high for a speedy one.
32 GB was Ok, even though the original recorder has an 80 GB drive. I rarely capture over 3 GB in a day of recording -- even with all 4 tracks going.
In short, the conversion worked beautifully. After doing the conversion and reassembling the recorder, it booted just fine and formatted correctly. A subsequent record test worked, as well.
The attached images show the recorder's interior, the components I used to do the conversion and the subsequent boot, format and recording operations on the converted recorder.
Cautionary notes I would add if you're thinking of doing this: Use an anti-static mat or surface. Micro-electronics don't like static discharge. Pay attention to the red-coded side of the IDE ribbon cable. By convention, this connects to pin 1 on the connector. The adapter orientation is correct for the cable when the slot labeled "master" is facing up when the drive is mounted.
Hope this helps someone who might want to update their R4 Pro.
Cheers,
Stephen H
So, I researched a way to connect IDE 2.5" notebook drive interfaces to some other solid state medium. I found this IDE to dual compact flash adapter from a company called Best Connectivity on Amazon. I also bought a 32 GB compact flash card - 400X - the uplift wasn't that high for a speedy one.
32 GB was Ok, even though the original recorder has an 80 GB drive. I rarely capture over 3 GB in a day of recording -- even with all 4 tracks going.
In short, the conversion worked beautifully. After doing the conversion and reassembling the recorder, it booted just fine and formatted correctly. A subsequent record test worked, as well.
The attached images show the recorder's interior, the components I used to do the conversion and the subsequent boot, format and recording operations on the converted recorder.
Cautionary notes I would add if you're thinking of doing this: Use an anti-static mat or surface. Micro-electronics don't like static discharge. Pay attention to the red-coded side of the IDE ribbon cable. By convention, this connects to pin 1 on the connector. The adapter orientation is correct for the cable when the slot labeled "master" is facing up when the drive is mounted.
Hope this helps someone who might want to update their R4 Pro.
Cheers,
Stephen H