This post has been edited by George27: 19 November 2012 - 12:58 PM
IDE to SATA adapter or is it the other way around
#1
Posted 19 November 2012 - 12:57 PM
#2
Posted 19 November 2012 - 01:18 PM
George27, on 19 November 2012 - 12:57 PM, said:
See this thread (more about SATA to IDE, but also talks about "bi-directional" ones):
http://www.msfn.org/...s-whichwhatwhy/
What you want is something like this (you have a "SATA only" motherboard - and presumably power supply connectors - and you want to install to it a IDE/ATA (ATAPI) CD/DVD drive, right?
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16812232004
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16812107112
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16812200787
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16812705119
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16812200196
the point is if you have a suitable power connector coming from the PSU, the one above uses a "floppy style" one AND if you have enough space "behind" the CD/DVD drive in the case, otherwise you will need this kind:
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16812197005
http://www.newegg.co...N82E16812186095
that takes very little space.
Anyway you have an IDE device that you want to connect to a SATA port, if you read attentively you will find (though the ide 2 sata or sata 2 ide is used indifferently) which one are the "right" ones for you.
jaclaz
#5
Posted 20 November 2012 - 06:47 AM
#6
Posted 20 November 2012 - 07:14 AM
tomasz86, on 20 November 2012 - 06:47 AM, said:
... but to connect a CD/DVD drive I don't think that an ATA33 speed is a real bottleneck.....
http://en.wikipedia....#Transfer_rates
http://en.wikipedia....-ROM#Technology
http://en.wikipedia...._transfer_modes
jaclaz
#7
Posted 20 November 2012 - 08:49 AM
#8
Posted 20 November 2012 - 09:46 AM
Tripredacus, on 20 November 2012 - 08:49 AM, said:
There have never been AFAICR SCSI2SCSI "converters" (or at least they must have been peculiarly "rare"), I have only seen "passive" adapters (pinout converters) or "full fledged" ISA, MCA (SIC!) or PCI SCSI cards.
Additionally (and I do have my experience with mixing SCSI things
It would be interesting if you could provide some data ....
jaclaz
#9
Posted 20 November 2012 - 07:25 PM
jaclaz, on 20 November 2012 - 09:46 AM, said:
Tripredacus, on 20 November 2012 - 08:49 AM, said:
There have never been AFAICR SCSI2SCSI "converters" (or at least they must have been peculiarly "rare"), I have only seen "passive" adapters (pinout converters) or "full fledged" ISA, MCA (SIC!) or PCI SCSI cards.
Additionally (and I do have my experience with mixing SCSI things
It would be interesting if you could provide some data ....
jaclaz
Unfortunately no data available. Just old tech support knowledge from jobs of years past. It has something to do with using a pin-adapter on some form of SCSI Iomega drive (Zip or Jaz) to adapt to either Fast/SCSI-2 or maybe SCSI-Wide. All I remember is that such things weren't covered under warranty because they had the habit of causing damage to the drives. Something about it running too fast on those controllers.
Definately not about chaining drives, although I do remember that putting a Zip drive in between chained Macs didn't work.
#10
Posted 21 November 2012 - 02:29 PM
#11
Posted 21 November 2012 - 02:39 PM
submix8c, on 21 November 2012 - 02:29 PM, said:
How is that device (I presume a DVD-ROM reader/burner) "marked"?
Higher than "24x DVD"?
However the specific OP model:
http://www.plextoram...px-870a?start=1
should not have that speed.
jaclaz
#12
Posted 21 November 2012 - 03:10 PM
#13
Posted 22 November 2012 - 04:19 AM
submix8c, on 21 November 2012 - 03:10 PM, said:
Not at all OT
I mean:
Quote
20x DVD=27.70 MB/s
both are well within the 33.3 MB/s of the "plainer" ULTRA DMA 2
jaclaz
#14
Posted 22 November 2012 - 12:46 PM
http://www.t10.org/t13/project/d1321r3-ATA-ATAPI-5.pdfon page 351:
"Ultra DMA modes 0, 1, 2, 3 and 4 have maximum transfer rates of 16.7, 25, 33.3, 44.4, and
66.6 MB/s, respectively."
IOW, the first two WIKI's must be lacking further info re: a Combo DVD Drive and must be inaccurate?
I limit read/burn speeds to prevent mechanical failure.
#15
Posted 22 November 2012 - 01:04 PM
Cheers and Regards
#16
Posted 22 November 2012 - 02:19 PM
bphlpt, on 22 November 2012 - 01:04 PM, said:
Sure
If the Wikipedia data is accurate, submix8c's Lite-On 20x should top at 27.70 MB/s, some 17% slower than what the specs (and conversely the 40 wires cable) should allow, so what is/was the reason to have also UDMA 4 (and conversely 80 wires cables)?
jaclaz
#17
Posted 23 November 2012 - 04:24 AM
#18
Posted 23 November 2012 - 07:49 AM
jumper, on 23 November 2012 - 04:24 AM, said:
Sure, but this doesn't make the device "faster", nor by itself justifies the *need* for a faster mode
I mean, more or less a cache or buffer behaves as a funnel, the idea is to have a continuous flow on the narrow end no matter how "intermittently" the larger end is fed, i.e. AFAIK is all about "regularity" and not about "speed", possibly it becomes relevant with non-sequential reads, though I doubt it can deliver a data transfer higher than the "label" 33.3 of the bus.
Actual tests (these are VERY old, if anyone can provide more recent ones it would be nice) on 16x drives:
http://www.tomshardw...ers,911-14.html
show an actual peak transfer rate of around 16x
So I don't think there is a "real world" *need* for the Ultra DMA4, the reason for it must be *something else*
jaclaz
#19
Posted 23 November 2012 - 10:59 AM
jaclaz, on 23 November 2012 - 07:49 AM, said:
http://en.wikipedia...._transfer_modes
Quote
There are two devices per cable.
Imagine read and write to the same parallel cable.
The situation is different at a serial cable: one device per cable
Hence it's maximum theoretical transfer rate on the device.
Beside user data there are commands to control the device.
Driver, cable and hardware result to user data transfer rate:
the limit can be 20x DVD speed user data at a UDMA2 PATA SATA adapter.
A optical drive offers max speed at end of media only.
I doubt a importand real world limitation at UDMA2 PATA SATA adapter.
Contrary any adapter is a additonal risk:
at a average IDE optical drive: do not buy a adapter, buy a new optical drive.
at a very good IDE optical drive: try one or more adapter(s)
And remember power supply, does current PSU offers a relating power connector?
#20
Posted 23 November 2012 - 02:35 PM
Quote
Can anyone make heads or tails of this? Useful?
http://www.convertce....com/ide-udma66
edit - No difference in transfer rate?
http://www.hardwarec...MA-66-drives...
/OT
This post has been edited by submix8c: 23 November 2012 - 03:01 PM
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