Hummm one thing I've learn with drive is to never say that!Sharp wrote:I don't think anyone would never need anything bigger than 250GB. It is a perfect total future proof size though..
And the first one I bought was 20 megs.

Moderators: Sharp, X-Trade, Pepperpotty, karmathanever
It depends how long Sharp wants to use the Kronos.Dniss wrote:Hummm one thing I've learn with drive is to never say that!Sharp wrote:I don't think anyone would never need anything bigger than 250GB. It is a perfect total future proof size though..
And the first one I bought was 20 megs.
No problem. Happy to hear it came in handy.kbrkr wrote:James, I want to personally thank you for posting this video. Because of this video, I was able to debug a start up issue when I installed my SSD. I would get Bootup Failed errors. and I couldn't figure out why. It was because they installed the MAIN SSD in Slot 1 instead of Slot 0 so when my Kronos booted, with the new drive in Slot 0, naturally it wouldn't load because there was no operating system on that drive.
FOR OTHERS ADDING A NEW DRIVE, BEWARE THE EXISTING DRIVE MUST BE INSTALLED IN PORT 0 AND THE NEW DRIVE IN PORT 1
pfrocha wrote:I decided to open the Kronos again, remove the new 120gb and put in just the 30gb original. Since I formatted it with FAT32 and later with ext3, it has to be formatted again. I started up the Kronos with an external DVD and the Kronos DVD in it, it asked me if I wanted to format the HD, I said yes, and then I got "disk format failed. cannot install."pfrocha wrote:I did not tamper with / clone the original drive. I took it out of the Kronos the day I installed the 120gb and that what it. Now the new 120gb drive has system 2.0.2 and is recognized. The old SDD still has 1.6 and does not appear...tjdeerinck wrote:You may want to connect it to a computer and remove all partitions from it first. If you had cloned it to the current system drive, you might be having a conflict of some sort. Removing all partitons / id's from the drive should get you going.
~TJ
I do not have a Sata case to connect the SDD to my Mac, so it would be great if anybody has other ideas before I have to buy a case (which will not be used again after this)...
Thanks again.
The HD mounts fine in my Mac, so I know it's working.
Why doesn't Kronos format this particular HD? Any ideas would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
So the 120GB drive works, but the factory drive does not ?pfrocha wrote: HELP ANYONE? Kronos refuses to format the second SSD, although it mounts in both Mac and PC. I've formatted it with ext3, tried plugging into Sata 0 and Sata 1, but Kronos still refuses to format it (so I can install the system).
with the advanced sample streaming of 2.02, is it really a big deal to have greater than 4 gig of ram ?kbrkr wrote:I purchased a 1 gig stick and it was cheaper and works like a champ. Why spend more money when you don't have to.
I doubt they will rewrite the operating system for 64bit to address the full 4gig of ram. And if they do, then you can purchase 8 gig!
""IF"" the OS was 64Bit, hell yeah.GregC wrote:with the advanced sample streaming of 2.02, is it really a big deal to have greater than 4 gig of ram ?kbrkr wrote:I purchased a 1 gig stick and it was cheaper and works like a champ. Why spend more money when you don't have to.
I doubt they will rewrite the operating system for 64bit to address the full 4gig of ram. And if they do, then you can purchase 8 gig!
I experienced the same thing when I installed a Samsung 830 256GB drive and remembered the video saying something about slot 0. Once that was switched over, it was pretty painless. 235GB usable once formatted. There's other things I learned while digging in, but I'll put those in the "Brave ones" thread.kbrkr wrote:James, I want to personally thank you for posting this video. Because of this video, I was able to debug a start up issue when I installed my SSD. I would get Bootup Failed errors. and I couldn't figure out why. It was because they installed the MAIN SSD in Slot 1 instead of Slot 0 so when my Kronos booted, with the new drive in Slot 0, naturally it wouldn't load because there was no operating system on that drive.
FOR OTHERS ADDING A NEW DRIVE, BEWARE THE EXISTING DRIVE MUST BE INSTALLED IN PORT 0 AND THE NEW DRIVE IN PORT 1
Yes, this has just caught me out too and the video is what gave me the clue to the problem! Thanks James!kbrkr wrote:James, I want to personally thank you for posting this video. Because of this video, I was able to debug a start up issue when I installed my SSD. I would get Bootup Failed errors. and I couldn't figure out why. It was because they installed the MAIN SSD in Slot 1 instead of Slot 0 so when my Kronos booted, with the new drive in Slot 0, naturally it wouldn't load because there was no operating system on that drive.
FOR OTHERS ADDING A NEW DRIVE, BEWARE THE EXISTING DRIVE MUST BE INSTALLED IN PORT 0 AND THE NEW DRIVE IN PORT 1