| Everything You Need to Know About Serial ATA | |
| By Gabriel Torres on June 27, 2008 | Page 2 of 5 |
Installation Installation of Serial ATA devices differs a little bit from standard IDE devices, as Serial ATA is a point-to-point connection, i.e. you can connect only one device per port (parallel IDE allows two devices per port using a master/slave configuration). So installing Serial ATA devices is easier than installing parallel IDE ones: connect one end of the cable on the Serial ATA port (usually located on the motherboard) and the other end of the cable on the device you wish to connect (a hard disk drive, for instance). As this connector has a notch, it can’t be installed in the wrong position. Serial ATA standard also defines a new power 15-pin supply connector. This connector was made standard from ATX12V 1.3 specification on. So if your computer has an ATX12V 1.3 or above power supply, it will have this connector. Even though a 15-pin connector is used, this power connection uses only five wires (one +12 V, one +5 V, one +3.3 V and two grounds). SATA-300 hard disk drives may have a configuration jumper to force the drive to work as a SATA-150 device. The problem is that this jumper comes installed on the SATA-150 position, limiting your disk drive performance if it is installed on a motherboard with SATA-300 ports. The correct configuration of this jumper is very important and we will describe it in details on next page. So installing a SATA hard disk drive is rather simple: remove or change the position of the SATA-150/SATA-300 jumper (if available, detailed information on the next page), connect the Serial ATA cable and the power cable with your PC turned off and that’s it.
| |
| Originally at http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/27/2 | Pages (5): 1 2 3 4 5 » |
© 2004-8, Hardware Secrets, LLC. All Rights Reserved. Total or partial reproduction of the contents of this site, as well as that of the texts available for downloading, be this in the electronic media, in print, or any other form of distribution, is expressly forbidden. Those who do not comply with these copyright laws will be indicted and punished according to the International Copyrights Law. We do not take responsibility for material damage of any kind caused by the use of information contained in Hardware Secrets. | |