- StarTech ATA-100 cables any good?
- Posted by Will Dormann on December 7th, 2003
Tony wrote:
Round cables are a bad idea. Cables over 18" are also a bad idea.
Combine the two, and you're just asking for trouble.
-WD
- Posted by Timothy Daniels on December 7th, 2003
"Tony" asked:
There can't be as there are no specifications written for round cables,
and the relative positioning of the individual wires (both data and ground)
shift with cable flexure. Absent standardization, how could one rate the
genre? But they do have advantages in allowing a more open air path
through the case and having lengths availbable that are shorter than 18
inches. In my PC, I've used various lengths of round cables, all shorter
than 18 inches, and I've had no *discernable* problems. (These are the
type with the aluminum braid acting as a shield.) They are available with
just a single connector at each end (which are great for putting a single HD
on a channel), the shorter lengths minimize the probability of signal cross-
talk, and the braid helps to shield from external noise. I use mostly the
10 inch and 12 inch sizes, but there are one or two sources on the Web
which sell these in lengths as short as 8 inches. And round cables really
do open up the air path through the case - handy if you have several
internal HDs and a couple optical drives in there. (I even have a round
cable for the floppy drive.) If you have a crowded case and have
enough IDE channels to allow one HD per cable and lengths are kept
to 18 inches or less, I'd recommend that you give them a try.
*TimDaniels*
- Posted by Timothy Daniels on December 7th, 2003
"Tony" wrote:
Most of the round cables seem to be made by two or three
manufacturers in China, so the retailer is probably not a factor in
quality. As for a 24" cable, it depends on the use. If it's for a
gaming system which can withstand occasional bit errors, go for
it, especially if you need the better cooling air flow through the case.
I'd also get the kind with the aluminum or copper braided shield
around the wires to maximize the immunity to noise from outside
the cable. For a combination of selection and price, check out
for 8" aluminum braided, single device:
<http://www.indypc.com/store.asp?menu=Drive_Cables&smenu=IDE_Cables>
for 10" aluminum braided, single device:
<http://www.svc.com/cables-ata-100-13...ice-ata-100-13
3-round-cables.html>
for 12" aluminum braided, single device:
<http://www.coolerexpress.com/12ideatrounc.html>
for 18" aluminum braided, dual device:
<http://www.svc.com/cables-ata-100-13...e-ata-100-133-
round-cables.html>
for 10" aluminum braided floppy:
<http://www.casecooler.com/flopcabriban.html>
*TimDaniels*
- Posted by Arno Wagner on December 7th, 2003
Previously Will Dormann <wdormann@yahoo.com.invalid> wrote:
Actyally it works well, as long as the devices attached to
UDMA CRC checking and you do not have too many errors on
the cable. In the second case you might exceed an OS or
device threshold and the device might get taken offline.
My experience is that up to 60cm works with HDDs, 90cm
does not work anymore (or fails after some minutes).
Arno
--
For email address: lastname AT tik DOT ee DOT ethz DOT ch
GnuPG: ID:1E25338F FP:0C30 5782 9D93 F785 E79C 0296 797F 6B50 1E25 338F
"The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws" - Tacitus
- Posted by Timothy Daniels on December 8th, 2003
"Tony" wrote:
If you have a spare PCI slot, $40 will get you a controller card,
and there will be the opportunity to put each HD on its own channel,
and you can use a direct channel-to-HD cable (a "single device" cable)
instead of a dual cable. That should cut down the cable lengths.
*TimDaniels*
- Posted by Mr. Grinch on December 12th, 2003
"Tony" <tonyjunk@comcast.net> wrote in
news:a9ydnX5z6ZStxE6i4p2dnA@comcast.com:
I can't wait until SATA drives make this question obsolete. Apparently 1
metre (39 inches) is the max length.
Given how much round cables cost where I live, I might be able to get sata
-> ata drive adapters, then I'd just need a SATA card and cables. Probably
come out to 2x the price I guess so perhaps not cost effective, but could
be a cleaner solution with less worry of cable created data errors.
- Posted by Frank Jelenko on December 28th, 2003
You're clock's off. It's considered rude to post ahead.
"Tony" <tonyjunk@comcast.net> wrote in message
news:a9ydnX5z6ZStxE6i4p2dnA@comcast.com...
- Posted by Rod Speed on December 28th, 2003
Frank Jelenko <jelenko2@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:sFuHb.249195$Ec1.8657074@bgtnsc05-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
Only by fools. And that should be your, not you're.
- Posted by Frank Jelenko on December 29th, 2003
It's considered to be rude - only by fools?
"Rod Speed" <rod_speed@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:bsm0f2$e052q$1@ID-69072.news.uni-berlin.de...
- Posted by Rod Speed on December 29th, 2003
Frank Jelenko <jelenko2@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:tl%Hb.557285$0v4.22687754@bgtnsc04-news.ops.worldnet.att.net...
Clearly what I said.
- Posted by Yousuf Khan on February 6th, 2005
Tony wrote:
I use a rounded StarTech cable myself (though probably not that long),
and it seems to be just as good as any of the flat cables I've used in
the past. Afterall, the idea of going to the 80-wire UDMA cables was to
add 40 additional grounding wires to the cable; they probably even added
way too much in this case just to keep the wire count an even multiple
of 40. I'd say if you still have signal integrity problems with that
many grounding wires, then you should just give up.
Yousuf Khan
- Posted by Rod Speed on February 7th, 2005
Yousuf Khan <bbbl67@ezrs.com> wrote in message
news:cPCdndv2KJssA5vfRVn-pA@rogers.com...
Nope, thats how that alternate ground system works.
More fool you.
And it flouts the standard having them in a round format too.
- Posted by Tony on December 7th, 2008
I need a 24" cable and I can get a StarTech round for a good price. Any
signal integrity issues with this brand (since they are so cheap)?
- Posted by Tony on December 7th, 2008
Will Dormann <wdormann@yahoo.com.invalid> wrote in message
news:bIJAb.44980$tu1.14209@fe3.columbus.rr.com...
That's what I've seen in other posts. However, I've also seen posts where
people say they have used round cables successfully. Is there any definitive
study out there between flat and round cables?
- Posted by Tony on December 7th, 2008
Timothy Daniels <TDaniels@NoSpamDot.com> wrote in message
news:FvidnSkz0q9C4k6i4p2dnA@comcast.com...
Unfortunately, I do need one ATA-100 cable longer than 18 inches for my
configuration. The separation between the drives is greater than 6", and it
seems the first connector is always 12" away from the controller connector.
That's really the problem. If I could find an 18" cable where the spacing
from the controller to the first device was around 8-9 inches I'd be right
in there.