A common claims you’ll see in iPod modding forums is that installing RockBox can bypass the iPod Classic 6th generation’s 128GB storage limit. It’s an attractive idea — after all, RockBox is famous for removing some of Apple’s original restrictions on older iPods, such as the RAM limit.
But after years of experimentation, and with zero verified guides or successful tutorials online, it’s safe to say: this is a myth.
Here’s why.
Why the 128GB Limit Exists on the iPod Classic 6th Gen
The iPod Classic 6th gen (released in 2007) uses LBA28 addressing to communicate with the storage.
- LBA (Logical Block Addressing) is how a device keeps track of data locations on a drive.
- With LBA28, the iPod can only address about 128GB of storage.
This limit isn’t caused by Apple’s software. It’s tied to the hardware storage controller inside the iPod. That means no firmware swap — not even RockBox — can push it past that ceiling.
The “thick” 160GB Exception
Apple did release a 160GB “thick” iPod Classic alongside the 80GB 6th gen. On paper, this looks like proof that the iPod could exceed 128GB — but it’s not that simple.
- The fat 160GB model actually used LBA48 addressing on its CE-ATA drive, which normally would allow massive storage expansion.
- However, when modders use flash adapters like iFlash or PATA-to-CE-ATA conversions, the iPod’s firmware still behaves as if it’s locked to LBA28, effectively reintroducing the 128GB ceiling.
This seems to be the result of firmware oversight or how the storage controller interacts with non-Apple hardware. In short: the fat 160GB model worked because of Apple’s very specific setup, not because the 6th gen truly supported more than 128GB universally.
The Real Upgrade Path: 7th Gen Classics
Later revisions of the Classic — often referred to as the 7th generation iPod Classic — officially switched to LBA48 addressing.
- LBA48 expands the addressing space dramatically, supporting drives well beyond 1TB.
- These iPods can handle huge flash storage mods without running into the 128GB cap.
This is why most modders recommend the 7th gen Classic (thin 160GB models, MC or PC serials) if you want to upgrade into the terabyte range.
Don’t Confuse Storage Limits with RAM Limits
Here’s where a lot of confusion comes in:
- Storage addressing limits (LBA28 vs. LBA48) control how much storage the iPod can recognize.
- RAM limits affect how many songs can be indexed in the database.
For example:
- 5th/5.5th gen 30GB models can support virtually unlimited storage (with RockBox) but max out around 20K songs on Apple’s firmware due to limited RAM.
- 5th/5.5th gen 60GB/80GB models have expanded RAM, allowing up to 50K songs.
- 6th gen 80GB, 160GB (fat), and early 120GB models also cap at 50K songs, but their 128GB addressing limit is the real bottleneck.
- 6th gen “7th gen” thin 160GB models combine the larger RAM with LBA48, meaning 50K songs and essentially unlimited storage capacity.
Why RockBox Helps With RAM — But Not Storage
RockBox does an amazing job getting around the RAM-based song database problem.
- Apple’s firmware requires the entire song database in the itunesDB file (track info + file associations) to sit in RAM. If you exceed the RAM capacity, the database won’t load, and the iPod can soft-brick.
- RockBox skips this by loading tracks directly from disk like a traditional MP3 player. That means no practical song limit, even on low-RAM models.
But again: RockBox cannot rewrite the hardware storage controller’s addressing scheme. The 128GB ceiling on 6th gens stays in place.
How to Identify Your iPod Model
Not sure which iPod you have? Check by going to:
Settings > About > 3rd Page > Model Number.
Here’s a quick reference:
- 5th Gen 30GB → MA/PA002 or 146
- 5th Gen 60GB → MA/PA003 or 147
- 5.5 Gen 30GB → MA/PA444, 446, or 664
- 5.5 Gen 80GB → MA/PA448 or 450
- 6th Gen 80GB → MB029 or MB147
- 6th Gen 160GB (fat) → MB/PB145 or 150
- 6th Gen 120GB (first revision) → MB/PB562 or 565
- 6th Gen / “7th Gen” 160GB (thin) → MC/PC293 or 297
Note: Genuine Apple boards often end in LL, while some reproductions may not.
Final Verdict
- If you’re on a 6th gen Classic (80GB, thick 160GB, or 120GB) → you’re stuck at 128GB max, no matter what mods or firmware you try.
- If you’re on a 5th/5.5th gen iPod → you can use infinite storage, but song count is capped unless you use Rockbox.
- If you’re on a 7th gen Classic (thin 160GB) → congratulations, you’ve got the best model for huge flash upgrades.
So next time someone says RockBox “unlocks” storage on a 6th gen Classic, you’ll know the truth: it’s a myth.

Good Afternoon:
I just watched your video and can tell you from experience that RockBox will allow you to go beyond the 128gb limit on the 6th gen and 6.5 gen iPods. Sometimes called the Classic first gen and the Classic second gen.
There are several tutorials out there but in essence you will need a Windows based computer and a 3rd party partition manager.
You install your flash modification, and format it as usual, leaving you with 128gb and a bunch of unformatted disk space. Then, using the partition manager you go in and expand the partition to fully use the drive.
It works really well, with one caveat. If you attempt to dual boot back to the Apple OS, you will crash the iPod and have to start all over again.
Alan Tochterman