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  1. Member
    Join Date: May 2004
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    Can some one please clarify? Are all optical drives 5.25" x 1/2 H? Or, are there two different types - full height & 1/2 H?

    Best regards, Richard
    Best regards, Richard
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  2. Member hech54's Avatar
    Join Date: Jul 2001
    Location: Yank in Europe
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  3. Mod Neophyte redwudz's Avatar
    Join Date: Sep 2002
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    A half height drive would be similar to what's used in a laptop. 5.25" is the standard width of a PC optical drive bay. Hard drive and floppy drive bays are usually 3.5" wide. There are also 2.5" and 1.8" wide hard drives that are fairly common.
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  4. Member
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    Originally Posted by redwudz View Post
    A half height drive would be similar to what's used in a laptop. 5.25" is the standard width of a PC optical drive bay. Hard drive and floppy drive bays are usually 3.5" wide. There are also 2.5" and 1.8" wide hard drives that are fairly common.
    Thanks, that helps but I'm still not entirely clear on this. Are the full height 5.25" optical DVD/Blu Ray drives the standard style for all desktops? Is it possible that a desktop might require a 1/2 H?

    Richard
    Best regards, Richard
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  5. Member solarfox's Avatar
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    Remember the big, clunky 5.25" floppy drives used on the original IBM PC, or on earlier 8-bit machines like the Apple-II and the TRS-80? That's what's meant by a "full-height" drive. In today's terms, a "full-height" drive would occupy two bays on a modern PC case; back then, that amount of vertical space was considered one drive bay.

    The optical drives being sold today are all "half-height" drives; i.e. they would only occupy half of a drive bay on an original IBM PC chassis.

    A laptop-style drive would be more like a quarter-height, or 1/3rd-height, if it were able to be mounted in a desktop-chassis 5.25" bay.
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  6. Member
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    Originally Posted by solarfox View Post
    Remember the big, clunky 5.25" floppy drives used on the original IBM PC, or on earlier 8-bit machines like the Apple-II and the TRS-80? That's what's meant by a "full-height" drive. In today's terms, a "full-height" drive would occupy two bays on a modern PC case; back then, that amount of vertical space was considered one drive bay.

    The optical drives being sold today are all "half-height" drives; i.e. they would only occupy half of a drive bay on an original IBM PC chassis.

    A laptop-style drive would be more like a quarter-height, or 1/3rd-height, if it were able to be mounted in a desktop-chassis 5.25" bay.
    Now I'm completely clear on this. Thanks, you've really helped me a great deal.

    Best regards, Richard
    Best regards, Richard
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  7. A 5 1/4 inch half height drive is about 5 3/4" wide and 1 5/8 inch high.
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  8. Member olyteddy's Avatar
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    A laptop-style drive would be more like a quarter-height, or 1/3rd-height, if it were able to be mounted in a desktop-chassis 5.25" bay.
    Laptop drives are usually called 'slimtype'
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  9. Mod Neophyte redwudz's Avatar
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    OK, I was wrong. I guess 'full type' drives were before my time. I do have a Syquest tape drive that takes up two 5.25 slots. I had to trim the support tabs to fit it.
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  10. Video Restorer lordsmurf's Avatar
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    Originally Posted by redwudz View Post
    OK, I was wrong. I guess 'full type' drives were before my time. .
    If it makes you feel any better -- guilty here, too.
    It wasn't before my time, but I surely forgot that modern 5.25 slots were half height.
    I had a full bay drive some zillion years ago (in PC years -- about 1980s in human years).
    Want my help? Ask here! (not via PM!)
    FAQs: Best Blank DiscsBest TBCsBest VCRs for captureRestore VHS
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  11. Member
    Join Date: Jun 2004
    Location: Victoria, Australia
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    And why 5 1/4" width? Because you can fit 3 of them horizontally in a case that would of held 2 of the older 8" drives!

    And guess what!! You can fit 3 of the newest 3 1/2" drives in a case that could hold 2 5 1/4" drives!

    I also have a full-height 1.4 GB SCSI drive (in the days of 400 MB IDE's) that cost me $2200 AUD

    Trev
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