Jumper Settings DS CS PK Rsvd Stand Alone (Default) ON OFF X OFF Master with Slave Present ON OFF X OFF Slave to Master OFF OFF X OFF Cable Select. OFF ON X OFF X= PK is a Parking position. The presence or absence of this jumper has no effect on the drive. Labeling may indicate to place this jumper when configuring as a slave. Your video card only draws about 150 watt's fully loaded so if you have a strong 230 watt power supply you may be just making it! I have a GTX 980 in mine which draws minimum 180 watts and it wouldn't run with your jumper settings however it worked with the number 8 posted settings.
Open Box: Images shown are from the NEW version of this item and are for reference only. The actual Open Box product may differ in packaging and included accessories, but has been tested to ensure basic functionality.
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Ships from United States. Most customers receive within 6-10 days.
Sold and Shipped by UnbeatableSale
Purchases from these Sellers are generally covered under our Newegg Marketplace Guarantee.
Ships from United States. Most customers receive within 6-10 days.
This item is covered by UnbeatableSale Return Policy.
Ownership: 1 month to 1 year
Killed an SSD, HDD, and my older PC I was trying to fix2/27/2019 11:34:45 AM
Pros: none
Cons: -made installing a SATA drive in my old DELL impossible using original brackets due to space on end of drive, ended up mounting the drive to frame of the PC using air flow holes. -first tried using a spare HDD I had in my parts drawer (previously working to my knowledge) and it wasn't detected by the BOIS -I then tried a spare SSD I had connected to another PC I was using for quick game storage, BOIS still didn't detect anything. -After both failures I chocked it up to not being compatible with my DELL's older BOIS so I reconnected my SSD to my newer system and it was flat out dead. I then tried several PC's and even a USB adapter I use all the time to pull data from PC's I repair and neither drive worked at all. Only thing I can think of is the adapter killed both of them. I know the SSD was working perfectly fine and I only keep working HDD in my parts drawer so this thing killed them both. -Ended up ordering an old IDE drive to fix my DELL and after pulling the adapter and putting in the IDE drive the DELL no longer even tried to power on. No clue what happened but the only common factor is this adapter.
Other Thoughts: YES the power was OFF and unplugged before I replaced any of the parts before anyone says I must of done this while it was powered on. Connected the IDE via my USB converter and it worked fine so thankfully it didn't kill that one as well. Don't try a cheap fix if you have a spare SATA drive sitting around, spend the extra cash and just get an old IDE drive to be safe. Ended up killing 2 good SATA drives and my old PC I wanted to fix in the process of SAVING a few bucks, lesson learned.
Ownership: 1 week to 1 month
Handy device to run my SATA hard drive on an older IDE motherboard6/1/2016 6:36:36 PM
Pros: Adapts easily to both SATA and IDE, also has 'peel and stick' adhesive attached if desired. I'm using mine as a temporary adapter and to reuse later if needed. Relatively quick shipping, coming from a 3rd party shipper. Great price. I'm considering getting another in case these become unavailable.
Cons: no con's from me!
Other Thoughts: If you need to run a newer hard drive on an older machine, for whatever reason, this is the ticket.
Ownership: 1 day to 1 week
Pros: This adapter worked great. It did what it was suppose to do.
Cons: None
Other Thoughts: Quick delivery
Ownership: 1 day to 1 week
Pros: Low cost. It did work on a test computer at work. I could 'see' my new SATA SSD on the IDE connector, partition it, format it, read/write, etc.
Cons: It won't work with anything else on the IDE cable, it has to be 'alone'. It also won't work in the machine I had planned to use it with. The BIOS doesn't even 'see' a HD there. It was also difficult to get reliable results on my main PC at home. At one point, there was an error on the drive that caused XP to completely lock-up any time I tried to access it. (CTRL-ALT-DEL was ignored, only hard reset would get the machine running.) When I put the SSD onto a USB/SATA adapter I have, I was able to reformat and repartition it. No problems, no lockups, perfect read/write, so the SATA drive is fine. The problem is with this adapter.
Other Thoughts: I'm glad it was only $10. Probably not even worth returning. Maybe it will work on some other machine, or with a different SATA drive. I'll hang onto it, at least.
Ownership: 1 week to 1 month
Stuttering performance on BLU-RAY DVD10/4/2014 1:54:43 PM
Pros: Fits physically well. That's it.
Cons: Absolutely bad performance. It does work in a sense that BLU-RAY DVD drive responds, reads and writes. But the performance is bad... Somehow data gets through a bottleneck in the transfer and it appears the bottleneck works alternatively sending <-> receiving data. Result appears as jerk movement and sound on screen...
Ownership: 1 week to 1 month
It works but existent instructions make it not for everybody9/19/2014 6:53:57 PM
Pros: (1) Inexpensive (2) Fits well behind the drive (3) Works User must slap the module on the back of a STA unit and then *disable* 'Auto' settings in BIOS for the module to work. In my case I installed BLU-RAY burner. I set for plain CD-ROM and disabled all transfer/32bit/LBA and other goodies. Don't touch the jumper if SATA to PATA bus conversion required.
Cons: Absolutely no instructions, high intelligence is required to figure out what is needed for the module to work. I am just wondering why KINGSWIN wouldn't supply a piece of paper explaining it?
Other Thoughts: Lack of instructions knocked off one egg. Those LED lights are completely worthless.
Ownership: less than 1 day
Pros: It sort of works under specific circumstances.
Cons: Will not work if you have another drive attached to the same cable, regardless of how the other drive is jumpered. Adapter has no jumper settings to select for master, slave or cable select. Only an odd ball SATA-IDE or IDE-SATA jumper, suggesting the adapter is bi-directional, which in itself makes no sense since the physical ports on the adapter only allow it to function in one direction. Complete waste of 10 bucks, and not worth bothering to send back for a refund.
Ownership: 1 day to 1 week
IDE SATA bidirectional adapter4/16/2014 1:27:28 PM
Pros: - Good approach for attaching to a SATA drive ( - Adhesive sponge to retain to the SATA drive - IDE <-> SATA bi-directional - Jumper to select IDE->DATA or SATA->IDE operation
Cons: - Does not appear to work with ASUS DVD-Writer drive DRW-24F1ST. I tried two different adapters (1 from newegg, 1 from local shop) and both boards resulted in I/O errors after ~15-30 sec. (DVD drive works fine with normal SATA connection or with a PCI adapter card). - I/O data errors with Windows XP, no matter which service pack is installed (SP1a/SP2/SP3). This occured with multiplr HDDs and CD/DVD drives. - No jumper for master/slave selection when attaching to IDE cable. Not a problem if a single drive, could cause problems if multiple drives on a single IDE cable - Cheaply built - Arrived broken from Newegg
Other Thoughts: I simply could not get this adapter board to work. I even purchased an adapter from a local shop to make sure, and the results above (the CON's) occurred with both adapters. This adapter simply does not want to keep up with WinXP + ASUS DRW-24F1ST DVD Drive. I eventually had to use a PCI adapter (Syba SD-VIA-1A2S) to meet my needs. Finally, I have to knock a egg due to Newegg itself. The original board arrived with bent IDE pins, a crack on the SATA power connecter and it appears that the adhesive had been previously used. It is almost like someone else tried to use this, returned it to Newegg broken and then Newegg simply re-shipped without checking the condition... I purchased a second board due to this, but both boards exhibits the I/O errors described above. I wish I could recommend the board - it is a clever design - but I cannot.
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Changing the jumper settings on a hard drive may be necessary depending on how you have your computer system configured. It is necessary to adjust the jumper settings on IDE and ATA type hard drives to configure them properly. The configuration depends on how the drive fits into the system with the other devices, such as other hard drives, optical drives, or other mass storage devices. This is sometimes required if you are replacing a hard drive that was damaged in your current system or if you are adding a newer drive to give your system more storage capacity. Whatever your reason, the steps are the same for all drives, and those steps start with having the proper documentation for your reference.
Shut down and unplug your computer before you attempt to remove the case or to install anything into the system.
Wear an anti-static wrist strap to eliminate any chance of transferring static electricity to your computer's internal components.
Open the side panel of the computer case. It may be secured with screws on the back or it may just slide toward the back. Remove the panel to expose the internal components.
Remove your old hard drive from your computer system removing the screws holding the hard drive in place. The hard drive is typically located near the front of the case near the bottom.
Look at the back of your hard drive near where the cables and power plugs are located. This is where the jumpers are located. On some hard drives the jumpers are labelled clearly to help you to know exactly where to put the jumpers. If your drive has these labels, move the jumper carefully to that location. Sometimes you can do this with just your fingers, but if the jumper is tight or in a difficult location, the needle-nose pliers will help.
If the jumpers are not clearly labeled, read your hard drive's user manual. If you do not have this document, download it from the manufacturer's website.
Install the drive into your computer and reconnect all the cables. Also put the side panel back onto the computer and secure it.
Plug in your computer and boot it up to test your drive.
Items you will need
Hard drive product documentation
Phillips-head screw driver
Needle-nose pliers
Tips
Newer Serial ATA, or SATA, hard drives do not require jumper settings for bus configurations.
Warnings
Always wear an anti-static wrist strap when working on your computer's components. Even a small shock may render your machine useless and could be an expensive accident that is avoided with an inexpensive anti-static strap.