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Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac
Vendor
Syba

Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac

3.8
Regular price
€46,00
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€46,00
Regular price
€76,00
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Unit price
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Save 39% (€30,00)
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  • Tracked Shipping on All Orders
  • 14 Days Returns

Description

  • Chipset: Satalink Spif223a
  • Supports 3.5-inch SATA and IDE (ATA) Hard Drive; 5.25-inch SATA and IDE (ATA) Optical Drives
  • LED Indicators: Power-On and HDD-Activity
  • Ultra Low Power Consumption
  • Two Independent Ultra ATA Channels with 128/256 Bytes Buffer Per Channel
  • 40 Pin IDE interface
  • Supports SATA Generation 1 with transfer rate up to 1.5Gbps
  • Supports Master/Slave/Cable Select mode by configuration switches

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Customer Reviews

Works exactly as described, well until it didn't UPDATE For my application I needed a way to access and old IDE hard drive I had laying around that I haven't accessed since 2011.This device comes packaged nicely and comes with a sata cable(nice addition) and the power cable. Since my current PC doesn't have any molex connectors, I went ahead and purchased the Monoprice 12-Inch SATA 15-Pin Male to 4-Pin Power Cable to go along with this. This makes it so you don't need the included power connector anymore and can connect your IDE device and this connector straight to a spare SATA power connector.I skipped the directions and figured out that I plugged the SATA cable into the wrong port on the device and my hdd wasn't be recognized. I needed to plug it into the "to computer"(orange) side. Once I did that, it worked flawlessly.I went ahead and picked up this adapter because it looked the most sturdy out of the others I've seen. It's encased in plastic so the board isn't exposed. There are others that look like they could have a slimmer profile but this one looked better made.This adds a few inches to the back of your drive, so you will have to plan accordingly if you want to use this in your case. For an IDE optical drive you shouldn't have any clearance issues, since those tend to have wide open backs into the chassis. In my situation, my hard drive bays are sideways in the case as designed, so I had to take the back cover off for the connector to fit. I ended up having to put the drive loose under my optical drive in the optical drive bay. Not an ideal solution, but it works without having my case half open.UPDATE 9/23: This worked flawlessly for about a day. Today, it hangs up and causes my entire system to hang/crash. The activity LED stays solid green as if it's accessing the drive, but it hangs forever. Serious bummer. Maybe I just got a bum unit. 1Affordable and Effective. Works as advertised. However, as noted elsewhere you need the small dongle to power the adapter and a large dongle to power the actual IDE drive itself. The power to the adapter will NOT power the drive itself. The included adapter will do the trick, but my system already had a pair on the power supply. The two cable need not clear in the sparse documentation. Also as a 2nd hard drive and with a CD/DVD in the machine, remember to set the micro switches to Cable Select. Once that was done it works like a charm. 4Just What The System Needed Installation is simple enough for most people familiar with basic computer maintenance. I Installed a SONY DVD RW DRU-710 IDE drive in a Dell XPS 8700 desktop computer with this adapter and needed to purchase a $5 SATA-MOLEX power adapter to connect to the Y-cable that is included. The Dell computer is running Windows 10. I set the switches on the adapter and bridge clip on the IDE drive to Master . The IDE drive was recognized by the system and does everything it was designed to do. Photos illustrate just how simple this adapter is to install. I would not hesitate to purchase another if needed. 5Worked Like A Charm..... Got this adapter to move data from an old 160 gig SATA drive to a newer SATA drive thru a old IDE MB port. I have a Dell GX-270 running Win 7 Ultimate that has two SATA slots and two EIDE slots on the MB. I had two SATA HDs on the two SATA slots (a 1 TB and a 160 gig.). I planned to increase the size of the drive on the second SATA channel to a 2 TB drive. In order to do so I needed to disconnect the DVD/RW on the IDE slot and plug the old 160 gig drive into it thru the SYBA adapter so I could move the files onto a new 2 TB SATA drive plugged into the second SATA slot where the 160 gig used to be. After opening the case, I disconnected the old 160 gig drive from the second SATA channel and mounted and plugged the new 2 TB drive into that slot. I then disconnected the DVD/RW drive from the first IDE channel and following the instructions that came with the SYBA, I plugged the IDE plug on the SYBA into the MB where the DVD/RW had been plugged. As I had had the DVD/RW set as master as it was the only drive connected to the first IDE slot, no changes were needed for the two switches on the SYBA. I connected the supplied SATA cable to the adapter and plugged it into the 160 gig drive as instructed. I then plugged a spare SATA power plug into the 160 gig drive and it was ready to go. I plugged the Y cable provided into the power cable that had been plugged into the DVD/RW drive and plugged the small floppy type connector into the SYBA's power slot. After making sure everything was plugged in right, I booted to the BIOS to check and see if it "saw" all drives right. Checked each drive and all showed up where expected. I then booted into Win 7 and after a little working with the drive management item, has able to activate and format the new drive. I changed the drive letter of the old 160 gig drive to E and made the new 2 TB drive D. I then started moving the contents of the old 160 to the new 2 TB drive. The only thing I ran into were a few dbx files that I had to confirm I wanted moved and the rest of the folders and files moved without a problem. I did note that while the speed was nice first it did slow down a bit as I got into some of the bigger folders. I got no error messages while moving the files and after the moving was complete, I was able to format the old 160 gig drive without any problem at all. I had got this adapter to allow me to transfer items to a new drive on a system with only two SATA slots and it did it's job in a very good manner. When I got the 160 gig drive formatted, I powered down the system, unplugged the 160 drive and reconnected the DVD/RWs power and data cables to there proper places and, after checking connectors, powered the system back up and it came back on with no problems. I checked the new drive by reading and writing to it without problems and all seems well. I can say this adapter did just what I wanted it to and would buy another one if needed. Since I did not intend to leave it connected up after the transfer was finished, I can't report on the long term usability of the device, but for what I needed it for it worked very well. Just what I needed. 5packaging was nice. This device rates OK in my book because after about 30 or 40 minutes of trial and error I figured it out and got it to function. If you are intending to use it on a computer to replace an IDE drive with a SATA drive you will need an power adapter cable to power the drive. This unit only comes with a DATA cable and a power cable to power the device itself, not the SATA drive. The instructions are NOT INCLUDED. You are completely on your own. So on the IDE side, if you are replacing a drive you will either need to remove the original cable from your motherboard to plug the device directly into it (If you have the space) or get a double male adapter since both the cable that plugs into the original IDE drive from the computer and the connector on the device are both female. I was able to remove the original cable and plug directly into the motherboard and still barely have room to close the cover. There are two unlabeled switches on the device that luckily were in the correct positions to allow the device to work without changes on my system. But I suspect they would probably require some repositioning in alternate situations. As far as throughput, there may be a slight decrease, but I am not sure how much as of yet. Otherwise it does make it possible to replace a defective IDE drive with a reasonably priced SATA drive instead of an unreasonably priced IDE drive, since they are not being made any longer and a lot more costly. Delivery was timely, packaging was nice. 3Nice unit, works well. I have an older unit that's a naked board (no case) and wanted something more suitable for use with an external drive using the motherboard's HD port rather than USB. This is it. Works great both directions, and no electronics hanging out in the air to accidentally short on something. Well made and worked instantly.As someone else mentions you do need to set an IDE hard drive to "Cable Select". Also, if using with a laptop IDE drive you will need an adapter for that as this is made for 3.5" IDE drives, not for laptops. It comes with a molex/floppy style power connector, so if your PSU only has SATA you'll need an adapter for that too (the unit does need power, tho not much -- it runs on a floppy power connector).The jumper switches are tiny and probably fragile, so take care moving them. A toothpick worked well for that. The connectors are labeled but the two switches are not (it would be nice if they'd silkscreen the settings on that side of the unit). Take care not to throw away the instruction sheet, which is INSIDE the folded cardboard packaging. I just set mine on CABLE SELECT and left it that way.ETA: After several hours in use the unit becomes very hot (much hotter than the HD attached to it). While this didn't seem to affect its operation, I would not want to use it inside a closed case without extra cooling. 5Nicely designed, poorly written instructions! I ordered two of these adapters and received them yesterday. They both are working, but not after a small difficulty. The instructions do not say any thing about needing to set the drive jumper setting to master. Once that was done they both worked fine. Each one is on a different make and size of drive and in different computers. So the four stars is for the lack of needed instructions for everything to go without difficulty, especially for the novice. I do have to say they fit well on both drives, but the power Molex power connector must be installed after the adapter is installed and removed before removal the adapter is removed. Other wise this adapter is sturdy and seems to work flawlessly as promised. 4Did not work on my Dell 745 Optiplex - manual needs revising I bought this Syba device because I wanted to install an IDE DVD burner onto a Windows 7 computer, a Dell Optiplex 745. which has only SATA ports on the motherboard. After several hours trying to make it work, I gave up, sadder, but no wiser.The DVD burner was working perfectly well on a Windows XP computer with IDE connectors on the motherboard, so it it is not the fault of the drive. And I tried several different working DVD burner drives, including a Sony, a Pioneer and a Plextor.After several hours of trying to connect the DVD burner to the Dell Optiplex 745, I concluded I had tried every possible angle, and that quite possibly the Syba device is a dud that had not been properly tested. Or maybe it is just incompatible with the Dell 745 Optiplex.Here is what I should have done at first, but did not do, because the user manual is carelessly written:[1] Use the orange SATA cable supplied with the Syba device to connect the SATA1 port on the computer motherboard to the black SATA port on the Syba (the Syba also has an orange SATA port, to be used if you have the female Syba IDE connector plugged onto an IDE male on the computer motherboard).[2] Plug a full size 4 pin Molex power connector to the DVD drive power point. The user manual fails to make this clear !!! Indeed, the manual tells the user to connect the computer power supply to a 4 pin mini-Molex power port located on the Syba device, which makes no sense whatever, because the Syba device's only connection with the DVD drive is through its 40 pin parallel port, and the parallel wires do not carry any power.[3] Turn on the computer and go straight to BIOS. Set the SATA1 port to active and look to see whether the DVD drive has been recognized. I tried numerous times, and sadly, it was never recognized. If the computer BIOS does not provide this functionality, you would have to start the computer and then test whether the drive is recognized.This should work. But it did not work for me. The manual that comes with the Syba device implies the DVD drive jumper settings can be any value, either Cable Select, or Master, or Slave. I tried all three and none worked.CONCLUSIONFrom the 230 or so reviews done so far, I gather that the Syba device has worked for many people. It is inexpensive, so I think it is worth trying. In my own case I had a good reason for trying, because I have an old Plextor 760A DVD burner that came bundled with a super duper early version of Roxio burning software, that can only be installed if the Plextor is present, and is much easier to use than Nero or any other DVD burner software that I have yet encountered.If anyone reading this has any ideas on anything else I might try, I'd appreciate hearing from them. 1Cumbersome, but Works Well I'm using this for a 250GB IDE WDBlue (WD2500AAJB-00J3A0) into a SATA II port on my Maximus V Gene running Windows 10 FCU to install FreeHDBoot onto a said drive for a fat PS2.I'm powering the drive and adapter with an external PC power supply (green sense wire jumpered to black ground).With the drive set to Master, the drive was not detected in Windows, with software, nor in UEFI/BIOS, both with SATA hotplug on and off.With the drive set to Slave, my PC would not boot past BIOS splash screen.The drive was detected and worked fine when set to Cable Select.The drive reported as being a SATA drive, not an IDE drive. I'm sure that's irrelevant to most people, but someone might find that useful to know.The adapter works fine, but it's temperamental with the jumper settings, despite claiming "Supports Master/Slave/Cable Select mode by configuration switches." I couldn't visible observe any switches on the adapter, so I assume it means the pins jumpered on the drives. I'm sure other drives behave differently with their setting.This adapter is nowhere near as convenient as a USB adapter could be, since you need external power (molex, if you don't have adapters) and you need to connect it via SATA, which will take another adapter to USB, opening your case to get to the motherboard, or external SATA ports.I read that some USB adapters didn't work for my application, so I didn't want to chance it.I have no data on using a SATA drive to an IDE application and have no use, method, or interest to find out. 4New life for older IDE drives to use with SATA motherboards and drive enclosures Extremely handy for breathing new life into an older IDE drive for use backing up my newer HP PC. Works like a charm. I jumper'ed the IDE drive as MASTER and the adapter worked first time right out of the packaging. It comes with detailed instructions in clear English for how to adjust the IDE's jumper pins and the bi-directional adapter's corresponding switches. My only suggestion is that it would be nice if the jumper settings were on a sticker on the adapter itself in case the paper insert ever gets misplaced. You may also need a "15-Pin Serial ATA Male to LP4 Female Power Cable" to adapt the motherboard's power connector in case your newer motherboard has only SATA power connectors as mine did. I went with the "C2G/Cables to Go 10149 15-Pin Serial ATA Male to LP4 Female Power Cable -6-Inch" here on Amazon SYBA SATA II to IDE ATA133 Bi-Directional Adapter (SD-ADA50016)C2G/Cables to Go 10149 15-Pin Serial ATA Male to LP4 Female Power Cable -6-Inchand it works fine. 5
Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5

Syba Sata Ii To Ide Pata Ata133 Bi Directional Adapter For 2.5" 3.5" Hdd Ssd Cd Dvd Sd Ada50016,Blac

3.8
Error You can't add more than 500 quantity.
Regular price
€46,00
Sale price
€46,00
Regular price
€76,00
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Save 39% (€30,00)