And turning an internal hard drive into an external hard drive is easy. The first thing you will want to do is copy across any data you need to hold on to, remove the old hard drive from your computer, and format it. Now you have two options for converting your old hard drive into an external storage drive: Use an external hard drive enclosure.
You said you have a desktop SATA drive which means it's likely a 3.5-inch HDD. You need to know this for any physical fit to the case. (Laptop HDD's are almost always going to be 2.5-inch varieties.) Then you definitely said your desktop HDD was SATA. Again, that's very common so it would be hard to get an incompatible "external HDD enclosure."
Launch the Start menu, search for Disk Management, and then click on the Best match. In the Windows 10 Start menu search bar, Disk Management is labeled as Create and format hard disk partitions instead. Within Disk Management, click on Action from the toolbar menu and then select Attach VHD. Click on Browse and then navigate to the directory
Share USB Drive from Wi-Fi Router. Pick the hard drive or flash drive you want to use - you can use external or portable hard drives, too - anything with a USB connection. For this, I am using
Select the "On a hard disk" option. Use the "On a hard disk" drop-down menu and select the location to export the Windows 10 full backup. (Image credit: Future) Click the Next button. (Optional
5. A typical desktop motherboard usually has much 4, 6, or even 8 SATA connections. You can add expansion cards to increase the number. 10-20 drives is likely not to have the physical space to put them in. You probably should consider an external NAS.
cLc5.
can i use laptop hdd in desktop