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Computer hard drive cables include IDE/PATA cable, SATA cable, SCSI cable, and others. Micro SATA Cables provide all varieties of hard drive cables to meet your requirements.<br><br>https://www.microsatacables.com/
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1. Introduction • A cable is at least one wire canvassed in plastic that sends force or information between gadgets or areas. • The image is an illustration of what the force string may resemble for your PC or screen. • The force line is one illustration of thousands of different links found in and around PCs.
2. Significance • There are a few kinds of hard drives, and they all require diverse hard drive cables. • To associate a hard drive with a PC, one should have legitimate links and attachment the links to the suitable spots.
3. IDE/PATA Cable • An IDE/PATA hard drive link is a lace link containing 40 pins. • A couple of gadgets might be associated with an IDE/PATA link, and the gadgets need not be of a similar sort. • For instance, an IDE/PATA DVD-R drive might be associated alongside an IDE/PATA hard drive on a similar link.
4. SATA Cable • A SATA hard drive link has seven conductors and is more modest than an IDE/PATA link. • A SATA link associates a solitary hard drive to a solitary connector on the SATA regulator, which is generally found on the PC's motherboard.
5. SCSI Cable • SCSI links seem to be like IDE/PATA links in that the two drives use lace links. • Notwithstanding, SCSI links have a larger number of pins than IDE links. Contingent upon the SCSI, a SCSI link may have 50 or 68 pins (IDE/PATA drives have 40). • Like IDE, different SCSI gadgets can be associated with a solitary channel through "daisy tying." Depending on the SCSI, upwards of 7 or 15 gadgets might be associated with a solitary SCSI channel.