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iPod 1. Generation Festplatte tauschen

Was du brauchst

  1. iPod 1. Generation Festplatte tauschen, Rückabdeckung: Schritt 1, Bild 1 von 1
    • Schiebe den Hold-Schalter in Sperrstellung, bevor du das Gerät öffnest.

    Boy, are these cases hard to open! I got nowhere with the spudger, but I did have success using duct tape. This is worth trying as it reduces the likelihood of scratching the case. Make a tab by sticking duct tape to the metal case starting on the side down by the scrolll wheel and ending up where the metal case ends on the firewire side. Fold excess duct tape back on itself so that it is 2x thick anywhere it isn’t stuck to the iPod. This is where you are going to grab it. Rub the duct tape with a spudger or a fingernail where it touches the iPod to make it stick better. Make a similar tab on the other side. Now grab the iPod in your right hand with your thumb at the 1/8” audio connector, squeeze gently, and pull on one of the duct tape tabs. (I stared with the one of the lock button side, but I don’t think it matters.) It is smooth sailing once the case starts to open up. Clean off any duct tape residue with alcohol wipes before re-assembly.

    R Calhoun - Antwort

    Well, maybe for you because you have baby hands and, it Took me less Then a minute to do it

    Matthew Cabanas -

  2. iPod 1. Generation Festplatte tauschen: Schritt 2, Bild 1 von 1
    • Es ist eine Herausforderung, den iPod zu öffnen. Sei nicht enttäuscht, wenn du mehrere Versuche benötigst.

    • Setze ein Öffnungwerkzeug aus Kunststoff in die Naht zwischen der weißen Plastikvorderseite und der Metallrückseite des iPods ein. Es wird etwas leichter, wenn du den iPod wie gezeigt oben und unten festhältst und zusammendrückst, bis die Kante herausspringt. Wenn das Werkzeug drinsteckt, dann schiebe es zum Lösen der fünf Rasten entlang der Naht.

  3. iPod 1. Generation Festplatte tauschen: Schritt 3, Bild 1 von 1
    • Führe das Werkzeug so lange an der Kante entlang, bis alle fünf Rasten gelöst sind.

  4. iPod 1. Generation Festplatte tauschen: Schritt 4, Bild 1 von 1
    • Führe das Werkzeug um die Ecke des iPods herum, um die beiden Rasten nahe am Dock-Anschluss zu lösen.

  5. iPod 1. Generation Festplatte tauschen: Schritt 5, Bild 1 von 1
    • Löse auch die fünf Rasten auf der anderen Seite. Möglicherweise kannst du sie lösen, indem du vorsichtig am Frontpanel des iPods wackelst.

    • Hebe die Rückseite vom iPod weg.

  6. iPod 1. Generation Festplatte tauschen, Festplatte: Schritt 6, Bild 1 von 1
    • Hebe den Akku nach oben und löse ihn aus der Klebeverbindung zum iPod.

    • Lege den Akku neben den iPod. (Er ist immer noch am Logic Board angeschlossen).

  7. iPod 1. Generation Festplatte tauschen: Schritt 7, Bild 1 von 1
    • Trenne vorsichtig das orangene Flachbandkabel von der Festplatte ab.

    • Wenn sich das Kabel nicht leicht lösen lässt, dann wackle es ein wenig seitlich hin und her.

    • Hebe die Festplatte aus dem iPod.

Abschluss

Um dein Gerät wieder zusammenzubauen, folge den Schritten in umgekehrter Reihenfolge.

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iRobot

Mitglied seit: 09/24/09

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636 Anleitungen geschrieben

9 Kommentare

Where can I get a HDD that will fit/work in this model? 1st iPod 5GB capacity. Larger capacity would be nice but not needed.

kevin - Antwort

I'd like to know the same Kevin.

rgcastreg - Antwort

Kevin. Theydon't make hard drives for it for anymore, but they make adapters for CF card and SD cards. Of Course you can put whatever size you want in it

David Robitaille (robitaill3) - Antwort

CF adapters do not work in 1G iPods. You can find old 1.8” drives on eBay, but they must be single-platter drives. The largest I know of is 40GB.

M Smith - Antwort

1st and maybe 2nd gen sync and charge only over firewire and need a hard drive. I tried a comact flash and a zif ssd in the format of the newer hard drives and it finds the drive, but wont format. It stops half way. The newer ipods (3rd gen and up) that sync over usb can use solid state alternatives (2nd gen is the same ipod with a bigger drive and a touch scroll wheel). If you can find a zif ssd smaller than 32gb it might work, but dont forget about the zif to 50 pin adapter.

ZIF SSD KingSpec ZF18-32

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B008NA...

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B009BG...

razor353 - Antwort

Has anyone replaced the 5GB drive with the 10GB (original model)? Any issues?

Rusty Lingenfelter - Antwort

Am trying to resurrect my old 5gb scroll wheel ipod. Keep getting the folder+exclamation. Makes a weird electronic buzzing noise as it tries to reboot. Occasionaly springs back to life only to freeze after a few minutes. When I do get it connected disk utility says the drive is fine. Am wondering if I can swap out the drive for a Toshiba MK3006GAL 30gb 50pin single-platter drive; it’s the only potential match I can find for sale. anyone tried this?

Allan Hughes - Antwort

Am sorry to say that I folded a bubblegum card over and placed it inside the case at the end near the drive connector. The iPod has worked flawlessly ever since. I suspect my HDD is fine but that there may be a loose contact somewhere at the connection between HDD and board that the extra pressure has helped rectify. Not really a ‘fix’ but it seems to be working.

Allan Hughes - Antwort

I have a 1st gen iPod and it’s stuck on the iPod logo; if I put it on disk mode, it will be stuck on the FireWire logo*. I’ve tested its 5GB hard drive on a 3rd gen iPod and it works fine. I’ve also put the 1st gen on disk mode with another two 20GB hard drives (both of them working and tested on the 3rd gen) and it will also be stuck on the FireWire logo. Any ideas?

*stuck on the FireWire logo = iMac keeps 'Loading…' until it says “The selected device could not be found.”.

Héctor Martínez López - Antwort

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