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M6600 Owners Thread

Discussion in 'Dell Latitude, Vostro, and Precision' started by tomcom2k, May 23, 2011.

  1. M-Z

    M-Z Notebook Consultant

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    I agree - it blinks much less when I disabled ODD drive. I still am not convinced it is something with hardware (or even if it should be considered as fault/malfunction).
    There is so much software installed these days - most of which we don't know too much about what they do. If externally installed Linux resolves this issue we must assume it is software related, not hardware (I really doubt it is about faulty and misguided wiring). Although you made me wonder. I will try to install Ubuntu on my external USB3 drive and look if the problem prevails.
     
  2. CSHawkeye81

    CSHawkeye81 Notebook Deity

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    Which hard drive slot should we put our SATA 3 ssd's in?? I know with the M17x only one slot really gives you sata 3 while the other is hit or miss.
     
  3. NotEnoughMinerals

    NotEnoughMinerals Notebook Deity

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    I think both are fine, but for good measure I put my SSD inteh primary and it runs flawless at SATA III.
     
  4. Alls

    Alls Notebook Geek

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    For example:
    Best Regards, Alex.
     
  5. Aaron44126

    Aaron44126 Notebook Prophet

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    Note that you'll need a caddy designed to fit into a 9.5mm optical drive (the regular 12.5/12.7mm ones will be too tall). Otherwise, any caddy that fits in a standard optical drive bay should be fine.

    Also note that the optical drive SATA port is only SATA-2 (while SATA-3 is available on the two internal hard drive ports).

    [Edit] Realized that I mis-read your question. I was thinking you wanted to put a hard drive in the optical drive slot in the computer, but I didn't catch the part about making the DVD drive into an external drive.
    In any case, the 9.5mm thing still applies. Get an external drive enclosure that accepts a standard 9.5mm ("ultra-slim") drive and you should be fine.

    The two internal hard drive ports are SATA-3. The other ports (optical, eSATA, mSATA) are SATA-2.

    I believe the light blinks to indicate any SATA activity so your optical drive will cause it to blink as well. It's a function of the SATA controller on the motherboard, it is not driven by the OS or device drivers loaded by the OS. I'm assuming that you do not have a disc in the optical drive when you are seeing this? Maybe there is some background app/service constantly trying to access the optical drive? Does it blink before the OS boots (i.e. while in BIOS setup screen)?
     
  6. Star Forge

    Star Forge Quaggan's Creed Redux!

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    Unlike the AlienWare M17X-R3, the M6600's HDD Slots both work fully on SATA III without issues. Therefore, any HDD slot will work.
     
  7. M-Z

    M-Z Notebook Consultant

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    There isn't any HDD LED blinking on externally installed Linux. Which means it is purely software related issue.
     
  8. Academic6xxx

    Academic6xxx Notebook Geek

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    Thanks. This suggests that the problem might well be caused by corrupt optical drive firmware, corrupt optical drive driver, or certain corrupt Windows files. The question is which one and how to figure out which one. The fact that running Linux provides band-aid solution to the problem does not convince me that it cannot be hardware related. Linux and Windows 7 might make different use of hardware components while running various services.

    The question is why do hard drive LED lights on several (but apparently not most) systems constantly blink on and off even when no processes are running and even when there is zero disk I/O and even when nothing is running in safe mode.

    Any ideas, thoughts, suggestions? Two other big questions are why, on affected systems, does disabling the optical/CD-ROM drive in device manager cause the problem to stop (another band-aid solution) and why, on affected systems, does enabling the optical/CD-ROM drive cause the problem to come back?
     
  9. Illustrator76

    Illustrator76 Notebook Consultant

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    Why are you spamming the same question over and over? Someone has already found an answer for you. Also, why is something so minor and relatively harmless such a big deal? It's not hurting anything. On pretty much every system I have ever had, the HDD light would do this most of the time. I don't understand why this is such a huge deal.
     
  10. danenick1212

    danenick1212 Notebook Geek

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    I ended up picking up a caddy from NewmodeUS. It fits, but I need to file about 1mm off the faceplate to make it fit perfectly. I put my 750gb hard drive in the caddy, with Intel 510 120gb in one drive bay and a 160gb Intel 320 in the other. Now I just need a cable to connect my slot-load DVD to use externally, or I could just buy an external slim Blu-ray drive. Not sure what i want to do yet.
     
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