CompactFlash, SD, MMC, USB flash storage. Anything that does not have moving parts inside.
October 5th, 2018, 14:27
May seem like a dumb question, but is it possible to read a PCIe SSD through a SATA connection. I have a Lenovo SSD that gets extremely hot when powered on, but does ID after being 'cooled' for a while but soon bugs out again. I would ideally like to cool the SSD constantly for about 30 mins while we try to get the data off, but in the PCIe slot it is pretty much impossible.
October 5th, 2018, 14:52
Yo can not connect pcie to sata but you can connect this drive to compatybile motherboard in decktop PC over the socket for the pcie drive. You can also buy pcie card for pcie drive on ebay that you can instal in desktop PC if ther is no special port. If the drive is nvme modrboard must support this.
October 5th, 2018, 14:56
Which parts get hot? Perhaps one of the onboard power supplies is out of spec. That would be the first thing to check.
October 5th, 2018, 15:17
COD wrote:Yo can not connect pcie to sata but you can connect this drive to compatybile motherboard in decktop PC over the socket for the pcie drive. You can also buy pcie card for pcie drive on ebay that you can instal in desktop PC if ther is no special port. If the drive is nvme modrboard must support this.
Mounting to the motherboard is not an issue, its cooling while in the PCIe slot which is the issue.
fzabkar wrote:Which parts get hot? Perhaps one of the onboard power supplies is out of spec. That would be the first thing to check.
Very hard to define as PCIe adapters mount the SSD under the PCIe card. However I do know its around the controller. I can't use freeze spray to determine exactly where the hot spot starts as you cant unmount the SSD without turning off the computer, by which time the whole board is hot.
October 5th, 2018, 16:19
ISTM that the ideal solution would be to find an adapter cable to replace the adapter card, but my searching turned up nothing.
October 5th, 2018, 16:23
fzabkar wrote:ISTM that the ideal solution would be to find an adapter cable to replace the adapter card, but my searching turned up nothing.
Indeed, hence asking if there was another way of mounting it. Thanks for looking.
October 6th, 2018, 15:16
Are those not M.2? Please upload a pic
October 6th, 2018, 17:37
mr_spokk wrote:Are those not M.2? Please upload a pic
Yes M.2 form and PCIe.
October 6th, 2018, 20:17
mr_spokk wrote:Are those not M.2? Please upload a pic
M.2 format identification:
http://www.hddoracle.com/viewtopic.php?f=106&t=2506
October 7th, 2018, 5:15
ddrecovery wrote:mr_spokk wrote:Are those not M.2? Please upload a pic
Yes M.2 form and PCIe.
Then there must be a data adapter for it, model number or pic would help.
October 7th, 2018, 10:29
I am searching the same, here is the picture.
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October 7th, 2018, 10:56
Put it to the pc moderboard and the motherboard and hdd to the freezer. Some aditional fan can help. -30C should help.
P.s. Look at the capacitors . Maybe one is at the and of life
October 7th, 2018, 14:34
This might is what you look for:
https://www.amazon.com/Ableconn-IU2-M21 ... B01HR0PKJQ
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- m.2 NVMe.jpg (25.44 KiB) Viewed 17132 times
October 7th, 2018, 16:50
It is not sata converter but looks similar
October 7th, 2018, 17:13
mr_spokk wrote:This might is what you look for:
Then what?
http://www.ssdformfactor.org/docs/SSD_Form_Factor_Version1_00.pdf
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October 7th, 2018, 17:56
It does.not convert pcie signals to sata in mine opinion. It is just socket transformation. I do not see any processor on the board that could transform the pcie signals to sata. For 30 usd it is like msata or m.2 sata to standard sata converter. This one is just another aplication to cinnect pcie hdd to this socket. I think the sata and pcie signals are separated.
October 7th, 2018, 18:07
Look at all pictures on amazon. They wrote it is not compatible with sata
October 7th, 2018, 19:25
What if one were to do this:
purchase an "Ableconn IU2-M2132 M.2 NVMe SSD to U.2 (SFF-8639) 2.5-Inch SSD Adapter"
cut off the adapter's connector and electronics with a hacksaw
plug an "Ableconn PEXU2.131" adapter card into the motherboard's PCIe slot
attach an SFF-8643 to U.2 cable between the two adapters
Ableconn IU2-M2132 M.2 NVMe SSD to U.2 (SFF-8639) 2.5-Inch SSD Adapter:
http://ableconn.com/products_2.php?gid=94Ableconn PEXU2-131 PCI Express 3.0 x4 Host Adapter Card with miniSAS HD for U.2 PCIe-NVMe SSD:
http://ableconn.com/products_2.php?gid=71SFF-8643 PCIe 4X adapter - Addonics:
https://www.addonics.com/datasheets/files/datasheet%20-%20ADSF8643PX4.pdf
October 7th, 2018, 19:50
fzabkar wrote:What if one were to do this:
cut off the adapter's connector and electronics with a hacksaw
Perhaps it might be better to cut a rectangular hole in the adapter?
Assuming there is no underlying power problem, one could attach heatsinks to the heat affected components using thermal tape.
October 8th, 2018, 4:57
COD wrote:It is not sata converter but looks similar
COD wrote:It does.not convert pcie signals to sata in mine opinion. It is just socket transformation. I do not see any processor on the board that could transform the pcie signals to sata. For 30 usd it is like msata or m.2 sata to standard sata converter. This one is just another aplication to cinnect pcie hdd to this socket. I think the sata and pcie signals are separated.
No, but the OP was also looking for something that were
outside the box for better cooling opportunities.
But you can continue with hacksaw and cutting
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