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C0deZer0
Oc'D To Rhythm And Police
Premium
join:2001-10-03
Davenport, FL

[hard drive] USB2 and Firewire ok, but eSATA hard locks

In short, I was able to get myself a Simpletech pro external hard drive that has USB 2.0, firewire 400 and 800, and e-SATA outputs for it. My computer has USB2.0, firewire 400, and (now) one e-sata port.

Just today I was able to buy an eSATA cable to really use the thing to the best. But now when I go to plug in the drive with it, not only does it not show up, but it seems to just put the whole computer into an endless lock-up, where even just moving the mouse around causes no response for several seconds at a time.

In short, I'm confused as hell, because the thing works on Firewire 400, and the cable itself is brand new. What am I doing wrong? Or is something wrong with the external hard drive itself?
--
Front Line Force Fortress Forever


psafux
Premium,VIP
join:2005-11-10
kudos:2

ESata is not always hot swappable. You may need to turn the system off and back on before it will recognize the device with ESata hookup.
--
Yes. the cat in my avatar is indeed mine.



C0deZer0
Oc'D To Rhythm And Police
Premium
join:2001-10-03
Davenport, FL

said by psafux:

ESata is not always hot swappable. You may need to turn the system off and back on before it will recognize the device with ESata hookup.
I have it in the BIOS to allow the port that the eSATA adapter from the case to be "eSATA enabled" in BIOS. And I too tried to shut down the computer, turn on the hard drive, connect the drive and then turn it on as well, but this too would cause lockups even in POST. Yes, it would proceed, but it would then be eternally slow and quite frankly just got fed up with it and shut the whole thing off.

So now I don't know which of the two is at fault here..
--
Front Line Force Fortress Forever


psafux
Premium,VIP
join:2005-11-10
kudos:2

any motherboard bios upgrades available that address the issue?
--
Yes. the cat in my avatar is indeed mine.



C0deZer0
Oc'D To Rhythm And Police
Premium
join:2001-10-03
Davenport, FL

The last BIOS eVGA made for my 680i board was the P33, which I already have IIRC, and was released almost a year ago.
--
Front Line Force Fortress Forever



psafux
Premium,VIP
join:2005-11-10
kudos:2

try it on another system to rule out whether the pc or enclosure is at fault?
--
Yes. the cat in my avatar is indeed mine.



C0deZer0
Oc'D To Rhythm And Police
Premium
join:2001-10-03
Davenport, FL

There's no other system in the house that has an eSATA port, if that's what you're alluding to.



koitsu
Premium,MVM
join:2002-07-16
Mountain View, CA
kudos:14

reply to C0deZer0
What motherboard manufacturer/model is this?



C0deZer0
Oc'D To Rhythm And Police
Premium
join:2001-10-03
Davenport, FL

Uh... eVGA 680i SLi.



koitsu
Premium,MVM
join:2002-07-16
Mountain View, CA
kudos:14

2 edits

reply to C0deZer0
This board has no eSATA port, from what the user manual shows. So, how did you get eSATA capability on this board?

If you're using a SATA-to-eSATA adapter (e.g. a cable that runs between the mainboard SATA port and a bracket that mounts at the back of your case which has an eSATA) port, stop using it immediately. I've described this in the past, and here too. Do not EVER use those adapters.

Also, isn't that the board with the well-known buggy southbridge chipset from nVidia, specifically buggy in regards to SATA? Pretty sure it is.
--
Making life hard for others since 1977.
I speak for myself and not my employer/affiliates of my employer.



janderso1
Jim
Premium,MVM
join:2000-04-15
Saint Petersburg, FL

reply to C0deZer0
Are you using an internal SATA to ESATA cable / bracket? If so try connecting an internal drive to the same SATA port.
--
Jim Anderson



toplevelpot
Unlucky in women and cards

join:2008-04-19
Los Angeles, CA

reply to koitsu
I have a 680i as well and the bios gives you the option to designate which sata ports you'd like to be esata. I have not used it but i know that they are there.



toplevelpot
Unlucky in women and cards

join:2008-04-19
Los Angeles, CA

reply to C0deZer0
How long is the esata cable? I remember there is a maximum length for esata, and from the sata headers to the back of the case might be too long a distance.



Tursiops_G
Technoid
Premium,MVM
join:2002-02-06
Norwalk, CT

1 edit

As koitsu See Profile referenced, the Maximum Length for eSATA is 2 Meters (approx. 6.5 Feet).
SATA to eSATA Adapters CAN be used, But *ONLY* if certain rules are followed:
1) The TOTAL cable length (including the Internal cables at BOTH ends) Must NOT Exceed 2 Meters. (If your External drive uses a 5-6 foot eSATA cable, Consider replacing it with a 3 foot cable instead).
2) If the Motherboard does NOT Support SATA "Hot-Swap", then the external SATA Drive Must be connected (and powered-on) BEFORE powering-up the PC, and Must NOT be Disconnected (or powered-off), until AFTER the PC has been shut down.

-Tursiops_G.
--
If You're Unsure, "RTFM"... If You're SURE, "RTFM" Anyway.



C0deZer0
Oc'D To Rhythm And Police
Premium
join:2001-10-03
Davenport, FL

reply to koitsu
I have the thing in a Coolermaster HAF 932 case, which provides front-panel USB, firewire, and e-sata ports. I took the internal sata lead to one of the ports on my board.

Anyways, today I say "screw it", and returned the cable... at least I can still use firewire (400), so it isn't so bad. The cable itself was 6 feet, IIRC. I couldn't get a shorter one.
--
Front Line Force Fortress Forever


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