Odd question this:
Is it possible to connect a standard burner (Pioneer 110 in my case), directly to the IDE connection where a laptop's optical drive would live?
I have a Thinkpad T40 with a CDRW/DVDROM combo in its drive bay.
I took advice (from here) a while back and got a decent external enclosure and run a Pioneer 110 in it - USB2 connection as T40 has no Firewire.
The 110 performs pretty well but does produce coasters.
I never get any failed burns from my desktop PC (also with a 110).
I am wondering if I can use a suitably adapted IDE ribbon to connect a 110 to my T40 (via the drive bay - with the standard laptop combo removed).
I know IDE adaptors are readily available to use a laptop drive in a desktop.
I'm told that laptop/desktop IDE interfaces are the same and it is just the connectors that differ - obviously the laptop is compact - so, in theory, it should be possible.
If I could do it, would the power requirements of a 110 be too much fo the laptop - could I provide external power?
Has anyone tried this (or similar) before?
I know it seems like a crazy ask but failed burns from the USB2 110 are annoying when the same drive on the desktops IDE performs faultlessly.
Is it possible to connect a standard burner (Pioneer 110 in my case), directly to the IDE connection where a laptop's optical drive would live?
I have a Thinkpad T40 with a CDRW/DVDROM combo in its drive bay.
I took advice (from here) a while back and got a decent external enclosure and run a Pioneer 110 in it - USB2 connection as T40 has no Firewire.
The 110 performs pretty well but does produce coasters.
I never get any failed burns from my desktop PC (also with a 110).
I am wondering if I can use a suitably adapted IDE ribbon to connect a 110 to my T40 (via the drive bay - with the standard laptop combo removed).
I know IDE adaptors are readily available to use a laptop drive in a desktop.
I'm told that laptop/desktop IDE interfaces are the same and it is just the connectors that differ - obviously the laptop is compact - so, in theory, it should be possible.
If I could do it, would the power requirements of a 110 be too much fo the laptop - could I provide external power?
Has anyone tried this (or similar) before?
I know it seems like a crazy ask but failed burns from the USB2 110 are annoying when the same drive on the desktops IDE performs faultlessly.
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