Quote from mgookin:
... what can be hotswapped and what can't?
eSATA
internal SATA
DVI rear port connectors
Quote from Bolimomo:
The internal SATA cable: unplugging it while the system is up and running is asking for trouble. Especially the SATA cable to the system disk drive. Don't know about the external SATA.
DVI - it is the video cable. Shouldn't be a problem. It's best to have the monitor powered off when you connect/disconnect the cable.
Quote from Bolimomo:
The internal SATA cable: unplugging it while the system is up and
Quote from Scataphagos:
There are "hot swappable drive bays". Can't you replace the system drive on one of those so long as the swapped-in drive was formatted on that same computer and has the same video setup?
Quote from jprad:
The concept behind a hot-pluggable drive bay is pretty simple, it's data and power connectors have different length fingers so that the data, system ground, and bus voltage are staged. Data is the first to be connected, then ground and finally bus when the drive tray is inserted and the opposite staging occurs when you remove the drive.
But, that's only half the battle. You're drive controller has to be hot-pluggable aware and that's typically only found in high-end RAID controllers, not commodity onboard controllers.
Quote from Scataphagos:
There are hot-swappable drive bays available as 3rd party add-ons. (When I've seen ads for them, I've not noticed any controller "requirements" or restrictions.) I suppose those bays would include some software to make the onboard controller, "aware"?
Quote from Scataphagos:
There are "hot swappable drive bays". Can't you replace the system drive on one of those so long as the swapped-in drive was formatted on that same computer and has the same video setup? Perhaps do the same with the internal SATA connectors??
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