larhaus wrote: Thu Jul 02, 2026 10:25 pm
james702283 wrote: Thu Jul 02, 2026 8:18 am
larhaus wrote: Mon Jun 29, 2026 3:57 pm
If you mean the drive in the old enclosure is failing then you don't have to buy the new version. Just shuck a drive from any enclosure and then stick it in the old enclosure if you want to keep the old enclosure. If you mean the old enclosure is failing and you're certain it's the old enclosure and not the drive itself, and you want to buy the new version of the Archgon product, then the new one won't work for flashing, hence this PSA.
Why would you think the enclosure is failing or that I was asking that?
I asked if the drive in the old style enclosure is failing and I buy the new archgon can I just put it in the old enclosure since the new enclosure is what prevents it from flashing. Doesn't matter now because I bought a different drive.
Re-read what you wrote.
You wrote "I have the old one." What is "one"? It wasn't clear what you meant by "one" because "one" is composed of two parts that can fail independently of each other. The drive could fail or the electronics in the enclosure could fail.
Since you weren't clear about what "one" was, and because that question could be interpreted differently, I covered all 4 combinations, especially for the benefit of others who may have had the same question.
Next time, either be clearer when you ask questions, or don't ask questions at all if you're going to be snarky to someone who replies and tries to help you when you don't completely know what you're talking about.
I simply asked why you would assume that it was the enclosure that was failing. I literally mentiioned wanting to use the old enclosure in my initial question. That isn't beng snarky if you think it is you need to touch grass.
The only person who made this personal was you. Could I have been clearer, yes.
But Again, the discussion is currently on the model being updated to a "new" version with the only change being the enclosure preventing the flashing. So the "new one" meant exactly that. Yes, enclosures fail but it's typically the drive itself. It was pretty obvious that was what I was referring to.
Also, since you want to be petty and personal for no reason, I am plenty knowledgeable, I just didn't think I needed to state the obvious which was already being discussed. Your response didn't even answer your own hypothetical. "Just shuck a drive from any enclosure and then stick it in the old enclosure if you want to keep the old enclosure", that's not an answer when I was stating my drive was dying. Have the day you deserve bud!