Difference between revisions of "Talk:Ultrabay Slim SATA HDD Adapter"

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(This is really compatible with older T4x's too and skip the PATA adapter)
 
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We've successfully used this adapter with older ThinkPads including T40 models.
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We've successfully used this adapter with older "incompatible"  ThinkPads including T40 models.
  
 
There is a physical restrictor which is just a piece of flimsy plastic which acts as a protruding nub and prevents the SATA adapter from fully seating in older T4 systems.
 
There is a physical restrictor which is just a piece of flimsy plastic which acts as a protruding nub and prevents the SATA adapter from fully seating in older T4 systems.

Revision as of 20:28, 8 December 2008

We've successfully used this adapter with older "incompatible" ThinkPads including T40 models.

There is a physical restrictor which is just a piece of flimsy plastic which acts as a protruding nub and prevents the SATA adapter from fully seating in older T4 systems.

That plastic nub can be cut, sawed or just snapped off with a decent grip and average size of pliers and it will fully seat into a T4 series ultrabay and recognize the drive.

As far as compatibility or voltage issues, we had the same fears but so far we've never experienced any issues of compatibility or damage to Toshiba, Fujitsu and Western Digital drives when used inside the SATA Adapter and various T41 - T43's including T43p.

We have successfully booted all of the "incompatible" systems from the adapter and whatever SATA drive inside and this enables us to swap the boot disk from a z60 into an older T40 and XP will run fine after you install the drivers:

TIP: If you need to boot an older "incompatible" system from a SATA boot disk from a newer system:

1. Setup the older "incompatible" T4x system to boot from the SATA ultraSlim HDD 2. Leave the T4x existing IDE HDD inside the standard slot 3. Boot and logon to the SATA build 4. You will be assaulted with "New Hardware Found" prompts, when prompted for the drivers point the Device Manager Wizards to the IDE drive c:\windows\inf directory for Windows to discover the necessary driver descriptors, some devices especially modems and GPU's will manually entering the older IDE directory of c:\windows\system32\drivers for sys files and c:\windows\system32 for some dll's. 5. You may need to reboot to realize full video compatibility, but audio, LAN / WLAN and Modem support will be immediate, chipset and TPM compatibility will also require a reboot. 6. Reboot the system again into the UltraBay SATA drive and you'll have a fully functional SATA OS drive in your older T4x and maintain the system settings from the other Z60t or other ThinkPad you migrated the SATA drive from.

Obviously this technique is helpful if you need to migrate large amounts to and from a SATA drive and especially when you may not have access to the UltraSlim IDE HDD adapter, or when you may have a malfunctioning native SATA system but want to preserve your environment and settings and have access to an older T4x system.

We've used this technique numerous times to repair the OS state of older T4 systems if we don't have access to the IDE adapter to remove the older T4x IDE drive and mount into the Z60t.

But this also slims down our necessity to carry two UltraBay adapters since we can take any SATA drive and use with any UltraSlim system.