They connect either to an eSATA port which some newer mobos have next to all the USB ports or for older boards they often come with a PCI backplate which connects to an internal SATA port to provide an external port. Power comes from the usual transformer brick.Sirrel Squirrel said:How do these external hdds with sata ports work?
TC1 said:I am looking for one that can use either an IDE hard drive or a SATA hard drive as i have an 80g IDE but want to get a SATA one in the future.
chaparral The one you have, it supports both types? Has a SATA connection on the enclosure? Does it come with a PCI SATA Card? Is it mains powered? Thanks
rpstewart said:They connect either to an eSATA port which some newer mobos have next to all the USB ports or for older boards they often come with a PCI backplate which connects to an internal SATA port to provide an external port. Power comes from the usual transformer brick.
Yeah, it's basically an internal drive but in a box outside the PC, the speed is the same as internal SATA.Sirrel Squirrel said:ok cool, so I take it they are a lot quicker than firewire then
Sirrel Squirrel said:ok cool, so I take it they are a lot quicker than firewire then
A single harddrive can't even reach sata one speeds..so there no real need for sata two speeds...photoshop said:does these support SATA II ?
chaparral said:A single harddrive can't even reach sata one speeds..so there no real need for sata two speeds...
Yes they will take sata 1 & 2 harddrives...photoshop said:that was not the question.
I asked if these could take sata II drives. In other words could i house a sata 2 drive in it?
I wish i could do this as well...I have way to many ext power bricks and plugs how it is..manoz said:Sorry to hijack the thread, is there any sata enclosures or ways in which you can connect the sata drive using internal power from the power supply. ie the PCI backplate has a data connection aswell as a sata power connection?
