Deluxe Usb 2.0 To Ide Cable Driver

Product No: 18007 Made In: Availability: 0 In Stock New, Retail Box. Buy the ultimate USB to SATA, IDE 2.5-in, IDE 3.5-in adapter. You don't need multiple adapters, when this is all that you need.

Amazon.com: USB 2.0 to IDE Cable Adapter (for 2.5-Inch and 3.5-Inch IDE): Computers & Accessories. A driver is included for Windows 98 systems. Download the latest drivers for your Sitecom USB 2.0 to IDE/SATA Combo Adapter to keep your Computer up-to-date. 'Here's how to install it so it will work for you: Have the drive turned on and running when you plug it into your (running) computer's USB. If you get a 'Found New Hardware' message, you're good. If not, click Start, and right click on My Computer, go to Device Manager, right click on Disk Drives and click Scan For Hardware Changes.

This hi-speed USB 2.0 to Serial ATA (SATA) Drive and IDE Adapter prepares any Serial ATA (SATA) device (e.g. Hard Disk) or IDE device to be plugged into a USB 2.0 port on any Windows or Macintosh workstation. This is perfect for techies recovering data, moving large files to a different computer, or a quick way to add another hard drive to a system. The adapter supports all existing Serial ATA (SATA) hard drives or IDE drives. Save valuable time using this adapter instead of fiddling with messy enclosures. Order your USB to SATA/IDE adapter today!

Features:. Access any 2.5-in, 3.5-in, or 5.25 Serial ATA or 2.5-in or 3.5-in IDE drive through the Hi-Speed USB 2.0 port - Unlike IDE, a Serial ATA connector is the same design regardless of drive size.

Compatible with any IDE or SATA drive of any brand or size. 2A AC power supply ensures power for the most power-hungry devices. Plug N Play - easy hot swapping. Windows 98SE, ME, 2000, or XP.

Driver is only necessary for Windows 98SE. Mac OS Classic 8.6+, 9.x - StuffIt Driver File on CD - (requires StuffIt Expander to open). Mac OS 10.x (Jaguar, Panther, Tiger compatibility OK) - No drivers necessary. Specifications:. USB 2.0 to Serial ATA (SATA) or IDE Adapter Cable.

Connect any device with SATA to IDE interface to a PC with USB. Real-world maximum sustained transfer rate is about 45 MB/s. Backwards compatible with USB 1.1 standard, but not recommended due to slow transfer rate. Use USB 1.1 if it is your only option. Package Contents:. SATA or IDE to USB 2.0 Adapter Converter Cable. 2A Power Supply (100V to 240V Auto-Switching) and companion AC Cord.

We individually test each power supply to ensure the power supply is working before we make this product available for sale. Driver CD included for use with Windows 98SE only or Mac OS 8.6 to 9.x. 1 x Serial ATA data cable (1 feet long).

1 x 4-pin white molex to black Serial ATA (SATA) power cable (6 inches long). User's Guide - TroubleShooting Tips:. The power adapter does not light up with a green light. Make sure your AC cord is plugged in a working wall jack and power supply brick. If the green light still does not light, the power supply brick or AC cord is bad. Your wall jack may also be defective. Continue testing as best you can to isolate where the point of failure is (1.

Deluxe Usb 2.0 To Ide Cable Driver

Wall jack, 2. AC Cord, or 3.

Power supply brick). The power supply brick has a green light, but my 3.5-in hard drive is not powering up. Lay the hard drive on a flat surface.

Usb To Ide Driver Download

Press ON/OFF switch on the power supply brick once. Touch the hard drive on its side, if you feel the vibration of the hard drive spinning up, that means the switch is now turned ON.

My SATA/IDE connector does not light up red. Make sure you connect the adapter to a USB 1.1/2.0 port while the computer is on. Unplug and re-plug the USB cable if the red light does not appear.

You can also try a different USB port, if the first port does not work. My hard drive is not being recognized or not showing up in Explorer (Windows) or Desktop (Mac OS).

2.0

Please allow a few seconds, even up to 30 seconds for the computer to mount the USB drive. After 30 seconds, go to My Computer (on Windows) or Finder (on Mac) to see if your drive mounted. I waited 30 seconds, but I still do not see the USB drive.

If the drive is new (e.g. Unformatted and unpartitioned), you will need to first use a Disk Manager (Windows - Start, Settings, Control Panel, Admin Tools, Disk Manager) or Disk Utility (Mac OS - Mac HD, Applications, Utilities, Disk Utility) to prepare the drive before it will appear on your computer. Where do I put the power plug for my 2.5-in IDE hard disk drive? A 2.5-in IDE drive will draw the required power from the USB port.

You only need to connect the USB to SATA/IDE adapter to the 2.5-in IDE HDD. Screenshots from Mac OS 10.2.8 (Jaguar): I mounted a 4GB hard drive using the USB to SATA/IDE adapter using the 3.5-in IDE portion. Another picture this time a 250GB hard drive. The same hard drive with a full 250GB partition. The iMac itself can not handle the 250GB drive, but using the adapter it recognized it perfectly. Copy of some iTunes folder in progress. 1.25GB takes about 27 minutes using USB 1.1.

Again, use USB 2.0 if you want better performance, and use USB 1.1 if it is the only USB port you have available. Review by sunkim50 - 2006 Mar 26 Content:. (1) SATA/ IDE to USB Adapter. (1) 4-pin molex to SATA Power Adapter. (1) Power Cable. (1) Serial ATA Cable.

(1) Driver CD. (1) Instruction Manual First Impressions: I have been using this adapter for a couple of days now testing out multiple hard drives to see if they are good or defective. This adapter really saves you the hassle of connecting up the IDE cable that is in your system onto the hard drive.

Deluxe Usb 2.0 To Ide Cable Driver

If you need to quickly hook up a hard drive to copy files for a friend or offload files from another hard drive, then this adapter is really cool. The adapter itself can hook up an 80 pin IDE hard drive, a SATA hard drive, and also I think maybe a 2.5 notebook hard drive. I am not 100% sure but the connector is a little smaller than the 80-pin IDE connector. The one other thing I like aboutt this adapter is the fact that it has a POWER ON/OFF button on the power cable which lets you power off the hard drive. Some other adapter don't have a power switch and just power up when you plug in the power adapter into the wall. There were a couple of things I didn't like about the adapter. First thing is that if you have multiple hard drives and keep swapping out hard drives while Windows is running it may not detect the hard drive and a windows restart might need to take place.

Another thing is that the hard drive itself is exposed and really has no protection from anything, so make sure it is in a safe and static free place while testing. Likes:. Saves some time if you have multiple hard drives that you need to test. Power ON/OFF switch on the power adapter.

Multiple interfaces including IDE and SATA Dislikes:. When using the cable the hard drive is exposed Other Reviews of this Product:. Requires Adobe Acrobat Reader. Previous: Next.

I have a USB 2.0 IDE/SATA cable/interface, (HW-338?), which gets detected by my Win XP (SP3) system, but is declared as an unknown device. Therefore, an IDE or SATA drive plugged into it are not seen. (The drives do run up ok, via the separate power supply). No driver cd was supplied with the device, and the vendor insists that I don't need a driver for Windows XP.

(The black plastic device has 2.5' and 3.5' drive interface connectors back-to-back, a SATA connector near one end of the body, and a sparkly silver USB cable coming out of the other end. Can anyone advise me, or point me in the direction of a solution?Please?

I have a USB 2.0 IDE/SATA cable/interface, (HW-338?), which gets detected by my Win XP (SP3) system, but is declared as an unknown device. Therefore, an IDE or SATA drive plugged into it are not seen.

(The drives do run up ok, via the separate power supply). No driver cd was supplied with the device, and the vendor insists that I don't need a driver for Windows XP. (The black plastic device has 2.5' and 3.5' drive interface connectors back-to-back, a SATA connector near one end of the body, and a sparkly silver USB cable coming out of the other end.

Can anyone advise me, or point me in the direction of a solution?Please? AndySwain Mine says that after you hook it up you need to go into computer managementdisk management and assign a drive letter. I have a similar device, USB2SATAIDE from startech.com and I see it under disk management, but it states 'Disk 1; Unknown; Not Initialized' When you try to Initialize it states 'Device not ready'. I've rebooted with the hard drive attached and it won't work, get the same issue. Have the Startech drivers, tried to use any one of those and Win 7 pro just comes back with 'Disk Drive' as the type of device and the current drivers, still doesn't work. Device Manager sees it as a USB Device under Disk Drives.

I've tried different hard drives, and different computers, all state the same issue. I'm guessing all the different hard drives I've tried are not bad drives. I was able to load Windows onto one when it was the main hard drive, but will not run as a USB attached device. I have a USB 2.0 IDE/SATA cable/interface, (HW-338?), which gets detected by my Win XP (SP3) system, but is declared as an unknown device.

Therefore, an IDE or SATA drive plugged into it are not seen. (The drives do run up ok, via the separate power supply).

No driver cd was supplied with the device, and the vendor insists that I don't need a driver for Windows XP. (The black plastic device has 2.5' and 3.5' drive interface connectors back-to-back, a SATA connector near one end of the body, and a sparkly silver USB cable coming out of the other end. Can anyone advise me, or point me in the direction of a solution?Please?

I have 7 external drives. All worked on Win7. When I ‘upgraded’ to Win10, the 4 drives connected by SATA/USB adapters, are not recognized. The USB ports all work fine. The drives are not all ‘dead’, all at once. The Disk Mgmt allots a space and assigns a drive letter, but does not read the drive, reporting ‘no media’, as if it is a card reader.

The Device Manager sees the adapter, but not the drive. I can only assume that it is a driver issue for the adapters, although Dev Mgr ‘update driver’ reports it has the most current drivers. So is this just another of the many issues that Win 10 has yet to resolve? Curiouser and curiouser. Most likely, yes, it is a Win 10 problem combined with the touchy interface. Are the external drives capable of being set to 'cable select?' I tried the Win 10 upgrade and my DVD/CD player refused to be recognized no matter what I tried though it worked just fine in Win 7.

Win 10 seems to have other driver issues as well including sound and video on different systems. It may take a few months for Microsoft to figure it all out. You are aware of the default 'information gathering' in Win 10 also I hope. Best to wait on the upgrade and go back to 7 for now, though I do like the look and feel of 10 better than 8.1 It just takes too much control away from the user at this point and is full of errors yet. I have a USB 2.0 IDE/SATA cable/interface, (HW-338?), which gets detected by my Win XP (SP3) system, but is declared as an unknown device.

Therefore, an IDE or SATA drive plugged into it are not seen. (The drives do run up ok, via the separate power supply). No driver cd was supplied with the device, and the vendor insists that I don't need a driver for Windows XP. (The black plastic device has 2.5' and 3.5' drive interface connectors back-to-back, a SATA connector near one end of the body, and a sparkly silver USB cable coming out of the other end. Can anyone advise me, or point me in the direction of a solution?Please? AndySwain Mine says that after you hook it up you need to go into computer managementdisk management and assign a drive letter.

Have just found that assigning the drive letter was stopping my disc from showing up in the windows environment. Even though the drive had just been formatted using windows management tool.

After drive letter assigned the disc shows up as a Hard Disk and is now available to the Alienware respawn program, which it did not do before. PLEASE MARK AS SOLUTION; cesareDH.

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