[SOLVED] SSD question

The one I posted a link to above is actually made for that specific SSD. It's non-standard and trying it out on other adapters may lead to disaster.

It's possible that it's just a shorter version, and does work in a standard M.2 (just doesn't use all the lanes), but I wouldn't be too sure unless I actually had it here to check out the circuitry and see if the pinout is the same. They aren't always standard, and if you send voltage back on what should be a PCIe lane, you're going to kill the SSD.
 
@Kirby, did you read that review I quoted earlier? Is that not the same computer? If you have Prime, you can get it in a few days.
No, I missed it. But I bookmarked the product in case the one I ordered doesn't work.

The one I posted a link to above is actually made for that specific SSD. It's non-standard and trying it out on other adapters may lead to disaster.

It's possible that it's just a shorter version, and does work in a standard M.2 (just doesn't use all the lanes), but I wouldn't be too sure unless I actually had it here to check out the circuitry and see if the pinout is the same. They aren't always standard, and if you send voltage back on what should be a PCIe lane, you're going to kill the SSD.
I'm pretty sure that's what I ordered. Everything I found says it's mSATA, and it fits into the mSATA port on the adapter I ordered. The M.2 pins look a lot smaller and closer together on the motherboard I have, but I didn't try to cram it into the port. But like I said, this is unfamiliar territory for me. I've seen the NGFF lettering, but I'm not familiar with what it means. I bookmarked the page in case I need it.

I got free shipping when I ordered other parts at the same time totaling over $25. Thanks again.
 
The second thing I ordered worked and the data is successfully saved. This after contacting SanDisk, who told me it was an OEM product and I had to contact Asus, then contacting Asus, who told me essentially nothing. And, since I was ordering anyway, I got free shipping by throwing in the SATA to 1.8" SATA adapter too, thanks Diggs, for that suggestion. Now I have 1 adapter (the one Diggs suggested) that I will use occasionally and 2 which I will likely never use again.

Unless... My store is a drop-off point for electronics recycling. I have a guy who picks up my junk for free, so I allow people to drop it off here for free. No TVs or major appliances, but everything else is good. I occasionally get some interesting things, but it's mostly junk. But it's likely the customer will leave it with me to be recycled, in which case I'll leave it in that adapter and put it in the HTPC I'm accidentally building as the boot drive.

I gave a customer some motherboard advice and the motherboard the ordered based on that, the Asus Q170T/CSM, is $150 tiny piece of overpriced specialty crap. I have never really looked outside the PC market before, so I didn't know mini-itx, much less thin mini-itx, were things. So I had to buy a motherboard for them and trade them. To be fair, it looks like a great little motherboard, it's just way too damned much money for what you can do with it. I have since ordered DDR4 RAM, a 150W external power cord, a gorgeous Corsair Obsidian 250D case, 2 different Kodi remotes (both Rii) with keyboards on them and a Blu Ray drive for it. I still have to spend nearly $200 on a processor, but I plan on using my current 2TB media drive out of my machine that currently has a barely functional Tversity setup. I wanted to use that for just the media and no OS install. If the customer leaves the drive with me for recycling (and why wouldn't she? It's virtually useless.) then I'll leave it in the adapter and use it for the OS drive in my planned Kodi machine.

I think it will be fun to get into Linux (barely) again for a short time. I have to learn how to install all the addons for it. I want to start with a bard Kodi system and then add only what I want to keep it lean. Plus I don't want to download a pre-built system with a bunch of illegal crap in it that's going to get me scary letters from my ISP.
 
Yeah, I ordered one the day I posted that link too. I wasn't sure if I had it in stock, so figured it couldn't hurt to be prepared.

Glad it worked out. Had it been an Acer Aspire S5 or S7 you'd really be in for a hot mess. Those are actually an SSD RAID 0 with a proprietary mSATA and no adapter exists (other than a few custom built by us data recovery guys ourselves).
 
Here's some pictures of what Luke at Recovery Force rigged up for one of these cases: https://www.recoveryforce.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=19&t=303

I actually got lazy and just bought one of those laptops to use as an adapter instead of making an adapter.
I have a degree in electronics that I haven't used in about 20 years, but I'm going to go ahead and just guess that I've always been to lazy/stupid to figure that out.

However, I wasn't too lazy or stupid to delete my Technibble cookies to fix the problem with having to log in every time :) Okay, maybe a little bit since it took me about 3 weeks to get around to it, but you know, sooner or later.
 
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