| Thermaltake Max 4 Active Cooling HDD Enclosure Review | |
| By Gabriel Torres on March 13, 2008 | Page 1 of 6 |
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Introduction
The good thing about Max 4 Active Cooling is that it also has a USB 2.0 port, so if you carry your hard drive to a place like your friend’s home where the computer doesn’t have an eSATA port, you can simply hook it up to any available USB 2.0 port. This unit, by the way, only accepts SATA hard drives. So you will need to buy a SATA hard drive to use with it (it doesn’t come with a hard drive and you will need to install it by yourself; installation, however, isn’t complicated, as we will show on next page). As the name implies, this enclosure has an 80-mm fan to cool down the hard drive. The case is made of aluminum.
The unit comes with a stand to make the enclosure to take less space on your desk.
On Figure 3 you see the rear side of the unit, where you can see both eSATA and USB 2.0 ports.
On Figure 4 you see the power supply and cables that come with the unit. As you can see it comes with one eSATA bracket, allowing you to convert any standard SATA port into eSATA, if your motherboard does not provide an eSATA port. So you won’t need to buy any extra part to make this enclosure to work with your computer enjoying the maximum speed provided by the SATA interface. It is important to know that eSATA uses a different plug than SATA, so the cable is different from the standard SATA cable that comes with the motherboard.
Let’s now take a look inside Max 4 Active Cooling. | |
| Originally at http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/532/1 | Pages (6): 1 2 3 4 5 6 » |
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