Electronics : Lenovo 40Y8725 Thinkpad Serial ATA Hard Drive Bay Adapter |
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Rating: - * T61 approved ... Works great on a T61 that I bought in January. Haven't tried hot-swapping. Needs to be a SATA drive. Nice feature; I'm liking the thinkpad's durability and options. Rating: - * Easy as 1-2-3 ... Does what it says on the box, and easier than 1-2-3 to install. Your old Lenovo CD/DVD drive slides right out, with no tools required, you then clip a new/second hard drive into this bay, then slide the bay into where the CD/DVD drive once was, again no tools required - and there you are! ready to go! All you have to do then is go to the Disk Manager within Windows and initilize/format the new disk. Excellent product, i love having the second chunk of drive space on my laptop, comes in very handy. Rating: - * Works properly ... I wnat to clone my hard disk in my IBM laptop to a new bought hard disk placed in the usb enclosure with Acronis true image. However, it usually failed for IBM laptop user if you place the new hard disk in the external usb enclosure. After I searched the Internet, one of the solution is to use this bay apator rather than external usb enclosure. This comes with IBM packge and seal label, and solved the problem. Now I have a 7200 rpm hard disk with all the partitons and functions cloned correctly. If you have this clone problem, this adaptor do help. Rating: - * Yes, It Hot Swaps Perfectly in XP ... We too wonder why people are having problems with this internal drive bay. Using XP SP2, it works like a charm! Don't need to shut it down at all. Just stop the device and away you go. It automatically re-installs cd/dvd bay with no problems. We are able to go back and forth at will. Amazing flexibility. We now have almost 400 GBs in our little T61 14" Lappy! WOW :) Rating: - * Exactly what I needed ... Works perfectly - plug and play out of the box - able add/remove without reeboot on T60 with XP - Perfect. |

Critics and audiences didn't seem too happy with Back to the Future, Part II, the inventive, perhaps too clever sequel. Director Zemeckis and cast bent over backwards to add layers of time-travel complication, and while it surely exercises the brain it isn't necessarily funny in the same way that its predecessor was. It's well worth a visit, though, just to appreciate the imagination that went into it, particularly in a finale that has Marty watching his own actions from the first film. --Tom Keogh
Shot back-to-back with the second chapter in the trilogy, Back to the Future, Part III is less hectic than that film and has the same sweet spirit of the first, albeit in a whole new setting. This time, Marty ends up in the Old West of 1885, trying to prevent the death of mad scientist Christopher Lloyd at the hands of gunman Buford "Mad Dog" Tannen (Thomas F. Wilson, who had a recurring role as the bully Biff). Director Zemeckis successfully blends exciting special effects with the traditions of a Western and comes up with something original and fun. --Tom Keogh


