Build Your Own Arcade Controls Forum
Main => Everything Else => Topic started by: jimmy2x2x on January 31, 2012, 03:38:53 pm
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I have this recovered drive from a dell mini 9 and would like to use it on a desktop pc
Anyone know what cable I would need?
Cheers
(http://i.imgur.com/pXCpRh.jpg)
(http://i.imgur.com/DqYSNh.jpg)
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A motherboard with a PCIe slot.
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err how might that help?
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AFAIK, that drive plugs into a PCIe slot.
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AFAIK, that drive plugs into a PCIe slot.
you should ban him for questioning you!
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AFAIK, that drive plugs into a PCIe slot.
you should ban him for questioning you!
Rofl
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What you have there is very likely what is being called "mSATA". Basically, it's SATA on a mini-PCIe slot. I very much dislike this because they're not really compatible in any way whatsoever. They just re-used the connector because it was convenient. It would be like putting Ethernet on a USB connector "because we had a lot of them laying around" (hey, kinda like the JVS IO "standard").
If indeed this is mSATA, you could theoretically just get a special cable to hook it straight up to a normal SATA port, but I'm not sure anyone makes one. They're intended to get dumped into specially designed laptops. You could try hacking up a SATA cable and soldering it down to the right places on the connector, but uh, yeah. Good luck: it's small, and it has to work at 3GHz.
If this is NOT mSATA and is in fact a real mini-PCIe card that just happens to have an SSD implemented on it (these were made, but I've never been able to find one - I'd kinda like one for my laptop, actually), then there's no way to hook it up to a standard SATA connector (because it's not SATA), but you could either put it in a standard mini-PCIe socket or buy a mini-PCIe to PCIe 1x carrier card.
Whatever you have, it's a Dell part. Dell can probably tell you what it is specifically, but they probably won't give much help beyond "put it back in your Mini-9".
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sigh... do I REALY have to do ALL the googling??
http://www.minipciessd.net/ (http://www.minipciessd.net/)
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None of those appear to be standard mini-PCIe size (either full or half). They're all about "one and a half" size. That's what was commonly used in the netbooks, but it won't fit in a standard mini-PCIe slot. My recollection is that many of those are also not actually PCIe but rather mSATA or similar with a proprietary pinout. At least nobody's ever been able to verify to me that they're actually standard mini-PCIe electrically.
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Wow that looks cool. How big is the capacity? 20gb?
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What you have there is very likely what is being called "mSATA". Basically, it's SATA on a mini-PCIe slot. I very much dislike this because they're not really compatible in any way whatsoever. They just re-used the connector because it was convenient. It would be like putting Ethernet on a USB connector "because we had a lot of them laying around" (hey, kinda like the JVS IO "standard").
and then companies start wondering why the get damaged product back cause users plugged ---steaming pile of meadow muffin--- into the wrong connector. THERE IS A REASON STUFF HAS DIFFERENT CONNECTORS ON THEM!!!
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Thanks for all the (various) information, I think I will leave it where it is ;)
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/btw they do have a mini sata to standard sata adapters available.
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So I just tried the same thing with the exact same drive, bought one of these adaptors..
http://www.amazon.co.uk/RunCore-70mm-50mm-Converter-Adapter/dp/B003BK4OZ8 (http://www.amazon.co.uk/RunCore-70mm-50mm-Converter-Adapter/dp/B003BK4OZ8)
And everything fits fine but it turns out the drive uses pata (it is infact described as a pata ssd) so no it did not work.
Shame as I had plans for it!.