How to make my PC support more SATA drives?

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Could anyone please advise me?

My PC has 8 SATA power cables and 6 SATA data ports, meaning I can hook up a maximum of 6 SATA drives.

Is there any way to increase this? Ideally I'd like to have about 14 or more?

Just to explain the reason why I want to do this... I want to rip my entire CD collection. I've been putting this off as I have about 2,000 disks, so ripping them one at a time would take me weeks of solid work. Instead of doing it that way, I figured that I could buy a whole bunch of second-hand laptop CD drives, then rip like 10 at a time, with the drives hanging loosely out of my machine, using multiple instances of the ripping program EAC. Drive speed and ripping speed doesn't really matter, because changing and processing 10 disks at a time is FAR less hassle (only about 200 sessions in total).

My PSU is the Corsair VX450W and my MB is the ASUS P7P55D (it's been a while since I built my PC, but it still works fine for me).

My MB also has an eSATA port - I don't know much about this port, but I read somewhere that it "supports port multiplier up to four devices" allowing four devices to be added? Is this true? If so, how could I do this?

Can anyone see any problems with my plan?

Also, if there is a way to hook up like a dozen CD drives, could all these drives damage my hardware somehow, or screw up my system? Is there a limit to how much you can add? (I know there's a limit to drive letters but I shouldn't need 26.) It will only be a temporary setup, but still, I don't want to damage anything.
 
Oooh. Thank you, all three of you, for these great answers! I'm really glad I asked now.

Thanks for the warning about laptop drives. I assumed they were all interchangeable! I guess not.

I didn't even know USB CD drives existed. This does indeed seem like a much better solution! The JBOD idea sounds good too, though I want the cheapest possible option as it's only temporary.
 
OK the jbod idea is a bit too pricey so I'm discarding that.

I'm planning now to buy a bunch of USB CD drives. (My case has plenty of free USB slots.)

If it's easy enough to do though, I'd still like to get a few extra SATA ports using an eSATA expansion card, like Zefan said. But I've really no idea what specs to look for in buying a card like this???
 
Absolutely FANTASTIC advice from every single commenter here. Thanks so much guys! Really appreciated! :)

I definitely want to use a USB hub now. I've just had a look at some models, and notice a lot of the cheaper ones don't seem to have AC power adapters (even though they say "powered"). I'm guessing these models just draw power from the computer? So I should make sure I get one which clearly shows a separate power adapter?
 
Thanks Skyripper.

I had figured that USB 2.0 would be more than sufficient, since it provides 480mbps, while I'll only be transferring data at about 20mbps (approx 5 mins to rip a 700 meg CD). But I could have got my calculations wrong?
 
LOL, thanks brennen. Some nice ideas there.

Great advice from everyone here! Thank you all.

And there sure are a lot of Italian dudes in this forum! :D
 
So... be sure to let us know how you achieve this epic CD ripathon :p Someone, somewhere, will be searching for a similar solution and no one likes coming across dead end threads with no closure
Yes, will do! :) At the minute I'm still mulling over the best course of action. I don't want to have to spend too much on drives (even though I'll hopefully re-sell them) and all the cheap USB drives I've seen require dual USB cables (one for power, one for data).

Is EAC automated @Lee James ? I've been ripping my DVD collection using a software setup called ARM. It's configured to rip, grab the title etc from online, and then encode to a more efficient file format.

It spits out the disc when it's done ripping so I can feed it DVDs all night then it completes the transcoding overnight :)
First of all, I don't believe there is anything that can compare with EAC in terms of accuracy and meticulousness of rip. Other programs might be easier to use and more convenient, but EAC is the only program used and recommended at Hydrogenaudio, the community of audio experts. So I guess it depends how anal you are about ripping accuracy.

I've used EAC for nearly 20 years now and wouldn't want to use anything else. Information and guides on using it can be found here:
https://wiki.hydrogenaud.io/index.php?title=EAC

As for whether it's "automatic". It is in many ways, although the ripping of each disc does require 5 user interactions:

  • 1. Put the disc in
  • 2. Press Alt+G to look up the disc on the Freedb database and retrieve the tagging information
  • 3. Select the database entry you want to use (if there are multiple entries)
  • 4. Press Shift+F5 to begin extraction and compression
  • [extraction and compression begins, using the directory structure specified in the prefs]
  • 5. After extraction, you get a report of whether there were any errors, and you can either examine the errors or click "OK" to ignore this and proceed.
  • [disc is automatically ejected]

An additional step would be if you used EAC's cover artwork feature. I don't use it because I don't think it's very good. It has a very limited database, embeds artwork within the files (which I hate), and it only saves front covers, instead of all the artwork, artist photos, etc.

For album artwork, I personally prefer to use the Discogs plugin for Foobar2k. It's a very powerful tagging tool, though using it is often a slow process, involving loading lists of artists and releases. What I like about the plugin is that it tags your albums with artist and release ID codes. Once your albums have this, you can automatically update all your albums' tags and artwork at a later date.

But my plan is to get all the CDs ripped now and then worry about art at a later stage! :) (Hopefully at some point before I die LOL)
 
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TBH I'd be hitting eBay and buying a couple used PCIe SATA controller cards, then asking someone like Tier1 if they'll do you a deal on 10 DVD/CD drives. Recycling/refurbing companies will have thousands if they don't automatically trash them these days. You can power the drives from any old PSU outside of the case if SATA power connectors is an issue.

Would be cheaper than buying any USB drives I'm sure
Another excellent bit of advice, thanks. This is such a great community!
 
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