Welcome, Guest. Please
Login
Home
Help
Search
Login
FAQ
Radified
Ghost.Classic
Ghost.New
Bootable CD
Blog
Radified Community Forums
›
Rad Community Technical Discussion Boards (Computer Hardware + PC Software)
›
PC Hardware + Software (except Cloning programs)
› IDE to SATA converter
(Moderators: Rad, Christer, NightOwl, Pleonasm, MrMagoo, El_Pescador)
‹
Previous Topic
|
Next Topic
›
Pages: 1
IDE to SATA converter (Read 10778 times)
Dirk B
Radmeister
Offline
I Love Radified!
Posts: 93
Monterey, CA USA
Back to top
IDE to SATA converter
Apr 8
th
, 2009 at 9:12pm
Does anyone have any advice/experience with the following? I have several 3.5" IDE drives. I would like to be able to use them to run my laptop. There is such a converter device but I would like to know if they would work on a boot drive. Would the motherboard be able to recognize the device on booting up, even (obviously) before the OS has been loaded? The drive would be powered from an older power supply as I don't think the laptop would power a 3.5" drive.
IP Logged
MrMagoo
Übermensch
Offline
Resident Linux Guru
Posts: 1026
Phoenix, AZ (USA)
Back to top
Re: IDE to SATA converter
Reply #1 -
Apr 8
th
, 2009 at 11:29pm
Dirk B wrote
on Apr 8
th
, 2009 at 9:12pm:
Would the motherboard be able to recognize the device on booting up, even (obviously) before the OS has been loaded?
Yes I think it should work, but I don't know anyone who has tried it.
Dirk B wrote
on Apr 8
th
, 2009 at 9:12pm:
The drive would be powered from an older power supply as I don't think the laptop would power a 3.5" drive.
The 3.5" drive will probably also generate more heat, so keep that in mind if you are trying to stuff it inside the case.
IP Logged
TheShadow
Kahuna
Offline
Old Ghost user!
Posts: 613
Florida, USA
Back to top
Re: IDE to SATA converter
Reply #2 -
Apr 10
th
, 2009 at 9:08am
I have used adapters to play a laptop drive (2.5") on a desktop PC, but they wind up hanging out the side of the PC, not mounted internally.
Of course you absolutely cannot mount a 3.5" IDE drive inside a laptop so any adapter you would use would have to have an IDE cable long enough to extend outside the laptop and of course you'd have to have the 5v+12v power supply to drive the larger drive.
There may be such an adapter available somewhere, but in all my travels, I've not seen one.
It does sound like an awful lot of work though.
I'd probably just put the IDE drive in an external enclosure and plug it into the USB jack on the laptop.
That I've done, and it works great.
Good Luck on your quest!
IP Logged
Dirk B
Radmeister
Offline
I Love Radified!
Posts: 93
Monterey, CA USA
Back to top
Re: IDE to SATA converter
Reply #3 -
Apr 11
th
, 2009 at 12:14am
I realize it's going to be a 'Frankenstein' type setup. The 3.5" drive will be setup outside, obviously, with a SATA data cable connecting it to the laptop and powered by an old power supply. I'm just not sure if the IDE to SATA adapter (
http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=34812...
) would be recognized in order for the laptop to boot from the IDE drive. I'm just working with different configurations/combinations and have several IDE drives that I would rather not let go unused. I do have adapters/enclosures to use them externally via USB but cannot boot from them in that configuration.
IP Logged
Dirk B
Radmeister
Offline
I Love Radified!
Posts: 93
Monterey, CA USA
Back to top
Re: IDE to SATA converter
Reply #4 -
May 4
th
, 2009 at 11:28am
Update: It works! The computer occasionally hangs up during booting, but turning off and then on has always resulted in a succesfull boot.
IP Logged
Richard K
Radmeister
Offline
I love YaBB 1G - SP1!
Posts: 51
Atlanta, GA
Back to top
Re: IDE to SATA converter
Reply #5 -
May 15
th
, 2009 at 4:05pm
I have something kind of similar. All external. Also about $20.
This is it: http:
http://tekgems.com/Products/tg-usb-sata-ide-25-35.htm
It is similar to the Vantec model
http://techgage.com/article/vantec_sataide_to_usb_adapter/
It connects to the computer USB port. It has sockets to accommodate IDE or SATA cables.
It plugs directly into the socket on the back of the hard drive and has a power supply for the HD. It is seen as a removable drive by the computer.
It allows you to access the information on an old hard drive. I don't know if you can boot from it.
So far I haven't been able to make it work. The HD spins up but Windows Explorer won't see the HD. Maybe I am doing something wrong. The guy that told me about it thinks it is wonderful.
Richard
IP Logged
Lurker
Gnarly
Offline
I Love Radified!
Posts: 42
GMT -5
Back to top
Re: IDE to SATA converter
Reply #6 -
May 24
th
, 2009 at 1:07pm
DO, check the jumper on the HD and make sure it's in the
Master
position. (and NOT the cable select position, that so many PC manufacturers use in their PC's.)
Every one of those little adapters that I've ever seen or used demand that the IDE drive be set to Master.
Good Luck,
IP Logged
unclebobee
Ex Member
Back to top
Re: IDE to SATA converter
Reply #7 -
Jun 8
th
, 2009 at 10:12pm
I have been using adapters for quite a while....some come with the power supply. Your laptop has to be able to boot from the USB. Set that in your BIOS as FIRST BOOT, if available. You can find adapters on EBay for $10.00 and less. Good luck !!
IP Logged
Pages: 1
‹
Previous Topic
|
Next Topic
›
« Home
‹ Board
Top of this page
Forum Jump »
Home
» 10 most recent Posts
» 10 most recent Topics
Rad Community Technical Discussion Boards (Computer Hardware + PC Software)
- Norton Ghost 15, 14, 12, 10, 9, + Norton Save + Restore (NS+R)
- Norton Ghost 2003, Ghost v8.x + Ghost Solution Suite (GSS) Discussion Board
- Cloning Programs (Except Norton Ghost)
- NightOwl's Bootable CD/DVD
- PC Hardware + Software (except Cloning programs) ««
Rad Community Non-Technical Discussion Boards
- The Water Cooler
- YaBB Forum Software + Rad Web Site
Radified Community Forums
» Powered by
YaBB 2.4
!
YaBB
© 2000-2009. All Rights Reserved.