Accessing Data on SSD

Author
Discussion

mart73

Original Poster:

61 posts

155 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
My old laptop died without warning, I've managed to remove the SSD.
Before I waste money on the wrong thing, is there a specific type of caddy/enclosure I need to use in order to access its content?

Any help appreciated.


Mr Pointy

12,517 posts

173 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Search for "M.2 Adapter" & you'll find something suitable - you want a 2280 B+M Key adapter:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/JIEYUCHU-USB3-0-Adapter-S...
https://www.amazon.co.uk/s?k=m.2+adapter&crid=...


mart73

Original Poster:

61 posts

155 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Mr Pointy said:
Search for "M.2 Adapter" & you'll find something suitable - you want a 2280 B+M Key adapter:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/JIEYUCHU-USB3-0-Adapter-S...
https://www.amazon.co.uk/s?k=m.2+adapter&crid=...
Thank you!

Mandat

4,222 posts

252 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
mart73 said:
My old laptop died without warning, I've managed to remove the SSD.
Before I waste money on the wrong thing, is there a specific type of caddy/enclosure I need to use in order to access its content?

Any help appreciated.

What device are you planning on reading the data on.

If another laptop or desktop PC, you might be able to plug the SSD directly into a free slot on the motherboard and avoid the caddy route altogether.

RizzoTheRat

26,781 posts

206 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
My wife's laptop died the other week and I bought this housing to access the drive, worked perfectly once she'd found the password for the encryption.


https://www.amazon.co.uk/UGREEN-Enclosure-External...

mart73

Original Poster:

61 posts

155 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Mandat said:
What device are you planning on reading the data on.

If another laptop or desktop PC, you might be able to plug the SSD directly into a free slot on the motherboard and avoid the caddy route altogether.
Thanks, hadn't thought of that. It'll be read on my laptop.

mart73

Original Poster:

61 posts

155 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
RizzoTheRat said:
My wife's laptop died the other week and I bought this housing to access the drive, worked perfectly once she'd found the password for the encryption.


https://www.amazon.co.uk/UGREEN-Enclosure-External...
Thanks!

Prak

809 posts

232 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
RizzoTheRat said:
once she'd found the password for the encryption.
Don't gloss over this bit OP. What OS was the laptop running and did you have BitLocker enabled?

mart73

Original Poster:

61 posts

155 months

Wednesday 18th June
quotequote all
Prak said:
Don't gloss over this bit OP. What OS was the laptop running and did you have BitLocker enabled?
Bitlocker wasn't enabled. It was running Windows 10.

maccboy

708 posts

152 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
Sorry to hijack the thread - but there seem to be some knowledgeable people on it!
Please could someone advise me on a caddy for access to this drive? My laptop has died too and - as well as an SSD as above, it's also got this HDD.
TIA

illmonkey

19,147 posts

212 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
Looks like a 2.5" SATA drive, something like this (assuming you want to connect to an other computer via USB) https://www.amazon.co.uk/BENFEI-Cable-Driver-Adapt...


Mr Pointy

12,517 posts

173 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
I think that's a 2.5" SATA HDD so something like this should do it:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/StarTech-comUSB-SATA-Driv...
https://www.amazon.co.uk/s?k=hard+drive+adapter&am...

If you can unplug it & post a shot of the connector & the label on the top of the drive we can be a bit more sure.

maccboy

708 posts

152 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
Thanks both. Here's the connector.


illmonkey

19,147 posts

212 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
Bingo! We were correct, either product would work for that drive.

It's SATA 2.5".

RizzoTheRat

26,781 posts

206 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
Can USB provide enough power for a 2.5" spinning drive? I know it can't do 3.5" but no idea about 2.5"

illmonkey

19,147 posts

212 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
RizzoTheRat said:
Can USB provide enough power for a 2.5" spinning drive? I know it can't do 3.5" but no idea about 2.5"
2.5" are 5v, same as USB. 3.5" are 12v, but you have a separate PSU in a desktop so not an issue

maccboy

708 posts

152 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
Thanks very much.

Ordered!

tribbles

4,069 posts

236 months

Thursday 19th June
quotequote all
You might find some USB adapters struggle with some 2.5" drives - particularly early generation drives. Use a USB3 socket (which will be able to provide higher power).

However, 1TB is likely to be reasonably new, so probably okay.