The topic Your old PC’s boot drive is faster than any USB stick. Don’t let it go to… is currently the subject of lively discussion — readers and analysts are keeping a close eye on developments.

This is taking place in a dynamic environment: companies’ decisions and competitors’ reactions can quickly change the picture.

If you’ve just upgraded to a brand-new, lightning-fast boot drive, you don’t have to get rid of the old one. The same goes for those ancient HDDs we all have sitting in a dusty drawer, like the ones we used to boot our Windows XP PCs from.

No matter how slow or small it is, your old boot drive can still find a new purpose, as long as it’s in good working order. Anything is better than throwing it away.

Even if we’re talking about tiny (~100GB or just a few hundred gigs) and slow HDDs that came out of the factory in the 2000s, they’re still faster than many USB sticks. While their capacity can be limiting for certain purposes, you can still give such drives a new lease on life.

For instance, if you’ve got a bunch of old HDDs you used as boot drives back in the day, you can pick up a hard disk docking station and back up all kinds of data to them. Don’t rely on them as your primary backup, but they can work fine as tertiary or even secondary backups.

From hybrid SSHDs to bizarre form factors — how well do you really know the oddest corners of storage technologies?

What does the acronym SSHD stand for in the context of hybrid storage drives?

Which company is widely credited with popularizing the consumer SSHD by releasing the Momentus XT in 2010?

What was unusual about the Intel Optane Memory H10, released in 2019?

The Sony Microvault and similar tiny USB drives once came in novelty shapes like food items and cartoon characters. What is the technical term for this category of novelty drives?

Apple’s Fusion Drive, introduced in 2012, is a type of hybrid storage. How does it differ from a traditional SSHD?

What was the primary purpose of the Robson cache technologies Intel developed before eventually pivoting toward SSDs?

The iomega Zip drive was a popular removable storage medium in the late 1990s. What was the original storage capacity of the first Zip disks released in 1994?

Western Digital’s Black² drive was a quirky dual-drive product released around 2013. What made it so unusual?

Using multiple old HDDs with a hard drive docking station can also work well for data archiving, storing local music files, as well as app and game (older and indie titles) installations. You’ll free up space on your main drive while keeping the old one(s) useful. Just don’t forget to label them if you have more than a few.

If the drive in question is of the 2.5-inch variety, you can grab a cheap external enclosure and use it like a USB drive. It’s compact enough to keep in your glove compartment for extra storage in a pinch, or for transferring files between computers at home. Old, low capacity HDDs are also a solid option for a test bench drive where you can try out different operating systems, apps, and other software.

Even a properly ancient HDD should have enough capacity to serve as a rescue drive. Load it up with useful utilities and a few Linux or Windows ISOs, and you’re good to go. Alternatively, you can turn one into a multiboot drive for testing purposes or for playing around with different Linux distros. Tools like Ventoy let you store multiple bootable disk images on a single drive, while still leaving room for regular files.

If you’re a retro game fan, you can turn the disk into a dedicated ROM and emulator drive by installing a lightweight retro gaming Linux distro, such as Batocera. Even a 100GB HDD has more than enough space and is fast enough to run retro games and emulators. This way, you end up with an external drive packed with retro goodies you can enjoy across different machines.

Lastly, you can donate the drive to charity. That way, it will live a second life inside a PC instead of slowly rotting away in a landfill.

The Sabrent HDD and SSD docking station works great with 2.5 and 3.5-inch drives no matter their age and capacity. The only requirement is SATA connectivity.

A good, easy-to-assemble USB 3 hard drive enclosure that supports 2.5-inch and 3.5-inch SATA HDDs and SSDs.

If your old boot drive is a relatively modern HDD with at least 1TB of storage, you can toss it into your NAS or media server if you need extra space, or use it for full OS backups, assuming the drive’s still in good shape.

If you don’t have a media server but store a lot of movies and TV shows locally, grab a cheap enclosure, copy your videos to the drive, plug it into your streaming box (or your TV, if it supports video playback), and turn it into a handy external media library.

Larger hard drives are also great as external storage for game consoles, especially older systems like the Xbox 360 and the PlayStation 3. That said, you can use an HDD even with a PlayStation 5. You won’t be able to play most games directly from it, but it works well for storing titles you’re not currently playing. Sure beats downloading them again later.

Those dabbling in streaming can record gameplay with OBS or any other software you prefer directly onto a hard drive, since hard drives are more than fast enough for that. You don’t even have to install the drive internally; recording to an external HDD works fine, just make sure it’s connected via a fast enough USB port.

Of course, nothing stops you from using a large HDD for the same tasks as smaller drives; you’ll just have a lot more room to work with.

The SABRENT external SATA SSD and HDD enclosure is an affordable, no-frills way to give your SATA SSD a second lease on life.

Even a decade-old SATA SSD is an Olympic sprinter compared to most hard drives. If you’ve just demoted your trusty SSD from its role as a boot drive, the last thing you want to do is get rid of it. Spend $10 or so on an external enclosure and turn it into a snappy external drive that can replace any USB stick or external HDD you might own.

A SATA SSD can also serve as a boot drive for your NAS or server, especially if you’re using an operating system that requires the boot drive to be separate from the storage drives. Similarly, you can repurpose it as an SSD cache for your NAS.

SATA SSDs are still very fast, even by modern standards, so you can use your decommissioned boot SATA SSD to bring old laptops back to life, most of which support 2.5-inch drives. They’re also a solid choice for a scratch drive, a media or temp file cache, and for exporting video and audio projects.

If we’re talking about a larger drive (500GB or more), it’s a great place to store games. Most titles run perfectly fine off SATA SSDs, and if you’re dealing with a newer AAA game that benefits from a faster NVMe drive (a DirectStorage title, for instance), you can move it there temporarily to free up space, then transfer it back when needed. Steam, for instance, supports moving installed games between drives, including external storage.

Of course, you can use a SATA SSD for everything you’d use an old HDD for. Back up data, archive large app and game installations, or turn it into a rescue drive brimming with handy utilities and bootable tools like systemRescue or Hiren’s BootCD. You can also plug it into a streaming box or TV to play local videos if you don’t have a media server, along with all the other uses mentioned above, including donating it to charity.

If your old boot drive is still in good working order, there’s simply no reason to ditch it. It can still be useful in a variety of roles, and the bigger and faster it is, the more options you have. Even ancient hard drives with 100GB or just a few hundred gigabytes of storage can be useful. It all comes down to assigning them the right role.

Your SSD may be having a bad time, but there are ways to fix it