What is this connector?
What is this connector?
I have recently taken apart some old PCs and found an HDD that uses this cable, but my motherboard doesn't seem to have a connector. Is there a way to connect this to SATA or PCIE?
edit: hdd, not ssd
What is this connector?
I have recently taken apart some old PCs and found an HDD that uses this cable, but my motherboard doesn't seem to have a connector. Is there a way to connect this to SATA or PCIE?
edit: hdd, not ssd
Oof, my back...
This is IDE or PATA
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_ATA
You can find IDE to SATA adapters online.
Edit: just realized how old I am now :(
i don't remember how much i paid for my first 8+ gb hdd in the 1990s, but it was probably $200 or more.. for what now fits on a $5 flash drive.
I remember paying 80 bucks to go from 4 to 6mb of ram. windows 3.1 load time so much better
An 80 wire one, too, so it probably supports some manner of "Ultra" ATA. 66 or maybe even upwards of 100 MB/sec!
IDE Cable. The end with two of these plugs goes to the drive, the end with one plug goes to the mobo. If it's a two-plug cable, it don't matter.
Get an IDE to SATA adapter or IDE to USB adapter to connect this drive.
My god I've never felt so old until this post
Same.
Was going to post this exact gif
I swear I saw this movie from the gif on TV once but I can't remember the name and only remember a small section of it
Saving Private Ryan, a gloves-off war movie about bringing this guy home on the last surviving kin rule. Had a lot of star actors in it.
IDE hard disk connection, pre-SATA.
you might be able to find an adapter somewhere.
PATA = Pre SATA
Good god, please tell me this is a troll post.
Time for a colon cancer screening.
Today I ordered some chicken nuggets from mcdonalds and asked for hot mustard sauce. the kid at register had no clue what that was and gave me some sort of chipotle sauce. we are, indeed, getting old.
IDE or Parallel ATA. Its ancient tech at this point. I doubt it goes to a SSD more likely a HDD.
You could use it for one, if you had an adapter. I wouldn't though. It'll almost certainly limit performance.
There where and apparently still are SSDs that use PATA connections. One of my first SSDs did because I put it in fairly old hardware at that time.
I can't imagine the drive has more than double digit GB though.
It's an 80gb hdd :/
yeah mb, its an hdd
For those who know: remember to book your prostate exam
Damn... 32 isn't that old, is it ?
Basically dead.
Nah it depends on the region I guess. I'm a few years under that and I worked with IDE cables many times as a kid
I think the technical name for that connector is "nostalgia".
That is an IDE cable, the standard for consumer-grade drives before SATA came along.
Sometimes you can find such cables with three connectors, one at one end, two at the other. And sometimes, a few wires are flipped over between those two connectors.
One IDE cable could host two harddisks, and most IDE harddisks had jumpers to set them to be drive 0 or 1. With a straight cable, you had to jumper them properly, with the partially twisted cable, you set both identical, I.e. you left them both as device 0.
IDE
https://www.amazon.co.uk/IDE-SATA-Converter/s?k=IDE+to+SATA+Converter
Something like this is probably what your after
Also I hate that we now live in a world where people dont know what an ide cable is 🤣
Kids these days, they don't even know how to change the ribbon in a typewriter.
What, so you're telling me that's "silly" because it's no longer relevant? Well, about that...
Im old enough to know how to do that too. My comment was clearly ment to be humorous.
It was one of those I feel old moments nothing moee
thank :)
You found an SSD that uses that cable? IDE SSDs exist, but they’re mostly modern devices for old systems.
Laptops for a while had these on the 2.5 inchers, and then I remember a very small window of time having IDE 2.5 inch ssds, but it was a very narrow window
What laptops do you remember with a 2.5" IDE ssd? Microdrive hard drives were more popular in laptops than their CF counterparts just because SSDs were so slow and low capacity. SSDs didn't take off until right before NVME era.
Disk on modules existed, but those were for industrial PCs and nothing a normal person would ever actually use.
Should also see the IDE slave/master jumper on the drive itself.
No Masters, no Slaves - only Cable Select!
So like... What does the jumper do?
Many IDE cables used to come with 2-4+ daisy chained connectors allowing you to plug in multiple drives into a single cable on a single IDE bus.
This meant that you had to ensure any downstream HDDs would be configured as slaves to show up properly to the system.
You could either do this manually by setting the jumper to slave (usually just removing it) or setting the jumper to cable select which would automatically configure master slave drives for you.
Example for a Seagate drive:
In your case, you could either use the master select or cable select and it wouldn't matter since you only have one drive.
I'm gen z and even I know this is IDE
It's not always what Gen are you, it's more like your knowledge and profession.
Sounds like something a boomer would say.
Thats an IDE connector, i think. Old conection for drives. AFAIK there are no SSDs that use IDE so its probably using a SATA to IDE adapter so you could just take it out and conect directly to SATA.
My first SSD had PATA(IDE) connnection. It was tiny, but stilll faster than my 7200 rpm HDD for gaming at the time.
There are SSD drives still being sold with IDE(PATA) connections! Expensive for what they are. Probably replacements for older vending machines or other electronic things that last decades.
Actually there are, I thought the same thing, but you can now get an SSD with an IDE interface. I think it's a recent thing, but I seem to at least remember something like a compact flash to ide once upon a time
Btw I recently learned that there were more protocols that used this cable than just IDE / PATA, there were some proprietary optical drives that used this cabling but could be damaged if connected to an IDE port. Was from a YouTube video and can't access history right now but long story short you had to use a port on your soundcard that had the same physical pin layout but was different electrically.
Yes there was a window of time where it was common that a CD-ROM drive was sold with a sound card and they would connect using the same type of ribbon cable. I worked for an OEM PC assembly company and installed many of those.
I have a USB cable with that and the laptop variant on the end. Works really well. Hard drives from 20-30 years ago show up on my MacBook as easy as flash drives. But very slow. As expected for those drives.
That's an IDE connector.
Try something like this: https://www.newegg.com/riitop-35ide2sata-mndl-ide-to-sata/p/35G-0009-00054?Item=9SIA6V89YW2632
thanks, ill try
IDE was a step up from SCSI bs
Incorrect.
sigh...
I still remember the "master" and "slave" settings on HDD's.
The "master" drive is the primary device, and the "slave" is the secondary. The configuration was set via jumpers on the hard drive or by using a "cable select" cable.
Having two HDD's installed in my PC felt like a achievement at the time.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-yakPdbD86g
Mhmm
Yep.