| Click here to select a new forum. |
| Superdrive in a cube - Master/Slave and pin 28 on IDE |
Posted by: rickrob on 2018-04-11 10:23:25 I have one of each of these super drives-- UJ-815-C, UJ-825-C. One's from a Powerbook G4, and the other from a G5. I also have a 50 to 40 pin adapter.
I'm guessing either one would work, but I read that these drives are set to master and you need to set the hard drive to slave.
I read somewhere that if you remove pin 28 on the IDE interface for the superdrive that will allow cable select to set it as slave.
Has anyone done this?
|
Posted by: rickrob on 2018-04-12 06:34:39 Everything worked fine with the hard drive set to slave. I can't remember where I saw it , but I read something about Target Disk Mode needing the hard drive set to master.
|
Posted by: beachycove on 2018-04-12 07:43:03 I replaced mine in the same way as you, with an iMac G5 SuperDrive, reasoning that if I needed FireWire target mode, I could take it apart and reconfigure for those purposes. What would it take? 30 minutes?
Having said that, where’d you get the information on the pins? That is interesting.
|
Posted by: rickrob on 2018-04-12 07:49:06
I replaced mine in the same way as you, with an iMac G5 SuperDrive, reasoning that if I needed FireWire target mode, I could take it apart and reconfigure for those purposes. What would it take? 30 minutes?
Having said that, where’d you get the information on the pins? That is interesting. Comments at the bottom of page talk about pin 28
http://www.atpm.com/12.03/cube.shtml
More on Master Slave and Cable select.
http://unixwiz.net/techtips/ide-cable-select.html
|
Posted by: rickrob on 2018-04-12 11:34:03
I replaced mine in the same way as you, with an iMac G5 SuperDrive, reasoning that if I needed FireWire target mode, I could take it apart and reconfigure for those purposes. What would it take? 30 minutes?
Having said that, where’d you get the information on the pins? That is interesting. What did you use to mount the new drive in your Cube? I modified the cover of my old drive into a mount. There was a member of the old Cubeowner forum that used to 3-D print them.
|
Posted by: beachycove on 2018-04-12 12:54:46 I seem to recall making something from some thin aluminum I had lying around. The measurements had to be right, and i was a bit nervous about the business, but it worked fine.
|
Posted by: ScutBoy on 2018-04-12 17:58:18
There was a member of the old Cubeowner forum that used to 3-D print them. That's what I used to put a Superdrive in my "good" Cube - along with the accelerated CPU. I think his forum name was "Paris", or had Paris as part of it. He was a knowledgable guy, and Cubeowner was a great resource!
|
Posted by: Byrd on 2018-04-12 22:59:57
I think his forum name was "Paris", or had Paris as part of it. He was a knowledgable guy, and Cubeowner was a great resource! parism was his username on CubeOwner, if I'm not mistaken. The brackets he made were hand carved from a plastic resin, no fancy 3D printer in sight! Would be nice to have a STL model to make some though.
|
Posted by: ScutBoy on 2018-04-13 07:37:19
parism was his username on CubeOwner, if I'm not mistaken. The brackets he made were hand carved from a plastic resin, no fancy 3D printer in sight! Would be nice to have a STL model to make some though. Byrd - you are correct.
However they were made, the brackets worked great in my Cube.
|
| 1 |