6. Put the pieces of rubber on the new hard drive.
7. Plug the new hard drive into the hard drive connector.
8. Plug in the audio jack.
9. Put the iPod back together.
Replace the Hard Drive in a Fourth-Generation
iPod or an iPod Photo
To replace the hard drive in a fourth-generation monochrome iPod or
an iPod photo:
1. Open your iPod according to
the instructions in Chapter 3.
2. Disconnect the audio
jack from the logic board
(see Figure 6-5).
NOTE
The rear casing of the 30-GB iPod video is slightly
different from that of the 60-GB and 80-GB versions,
because the 30-GB hard drive is physically smaller than
the other drives. If you??™re upgrading your iPod video??™s
30-GB hard drive to something with more storage space
(including the 100-GB non-OEM option), you need to
replace the rear casing, too, to accommodate the larger
drive. If you already have a 60-GB or 80-GB iPod video,
you already have the right casing, unless, of course,
you??™re downgrading your iPod to 30-GB for some strange
reason known only to you. Occasionally, Brandon offers
iPod casings for sale on www.
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