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  • Question for resident computer gurus

    Anyone know of a SATA signal repeater? Company I work for has an application where the SATA signal needs to travel farther than the prescribed 1 meter. We need to find - if available - a signal repeater that can be put in line with the cable, will read the signal and then repeat it back to its original strength. Something like what was done with coax cable networks.

    Anyone know of hardware that is available to do that???

    Thanks!
    My house is in Georgia but Wisconsin is my home.

  • #2
    Re: Question for resident computer gurus

    Originally posted by AtlPackFan
    Anyone know of a SATA signal repeater? Company I work for has an application where the SATA signal needs to travel farther than the prescribed 1 meter. We need to find - if available - a signal repeater that can be put in line with the cable, will read the signal and then repeat it back to its original strength. Something like what was done with coax cable networks.

    Anyone know of hardware that is available to do that???

    Thanks!
    Sure there is a product called xcaourse3. It is good stuff.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Question for resident computer gurus

      Originally posted by Deputy Nutz
      Originally posted by AtlPackFan
      Anyone know of a SATA signal repeater? Company I work for has an application where the SATA signal needs to travel farther than the prescribed 1 meter. We need to find - if available - a signal repeater that can be put in line with the cable, will read the signal and then repeat it back to its original strength. Something like what was done with coax cable networks.

      Anyone know of hardware that is available to do that???

      Thanks!
      Sure there is a product called xcaourse3. It is good stuff.
      Thanks DN. Do you have a link to the product or the manufacturer?
      My house is in Georgia but Wisconsin is my home.

      Comment


      • #4
        I was hoping someone else would have called bullshit on me before you responded. I don't know what the fuck you even said.

        Comment


        • #5
          Sounds mostly made up to me Nutz.

          Whats the max length on an eSata cable? I havent been able to find the spec. Wouldnt a NAS be a much much much....much....much better solution than a really long cable?
          Originally posted by 3irty1
          This is museum quality stupidity.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Deputy Nutz
            I was hoping someone else would have called bullshit on me before you responded. I don't know what the fuck you even said.
            Well I bit.

            I'm in a bit of bind so I'd have looked even if you called it UpShitCreek_w/o_APaddle3....which may describe me at this point.
            My house is in Georgia but Wisconsin is my home.

            Comment


            • #7
              Check here.

              C.H.U.D.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Zool
                Sounds mostly made up to me Nutz.

                Whats the max length on an eSata cable? I havent been able to find the spec. Wouldnt a NAS be a much much much....much....much better solution than a really long cable?
                eSATA is 2 meters...I think. But our application is limited to internal. It has to do with our customer using a hot-plug SATA caddy and how its inclusion affects signal integrity. That is why we need to find a repeater...or lose the customer.
                My house is in Georgia but Wisconsin is my home.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Freak Out
                  Thanks Freak Out!

                  I found lots of SATA stuff but no repeaters...at least not that I could see on a quick check. When I have more time I will go back and look deeper.

                  Again, thanks!
                  My house is in Georgia but Wisconsin is my home.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Weird, so a case with a hotswap drive bay thats farther than 3ft from the sata plug on the MB. Thats a big case.

                    I have never seen a signal repeater for sata. I remember seeing one for ATA133 and SCSI LVD back when I worked for Western Digital but there was all sorts of data integrity issues. Maybe you could call Seagate/Maxtor/WD's customer support and ask to talk with R&D. See if they have any suggestions.

                    How is your app limited to internal only?
                    Originally posted by 3irty1
                    This is museum quality stupidity.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Zool
                      Weird, so a case with a hotswap drive bay thats farther than 3ft from the sata plug on the MB. Thats a big case.
                      From what the engineers tell me, Intel specs the max distance a SATA connector can be from the southbridge on a computer. From that distance a user is then supposed to be able to add a 1 meter cable to a drive and be within a reliable communications distance. "Distance" is affected by a lot of different things, including connectors. Because the SATA connectors on our motherboard are toward the outer edges of Intel's spec and because the customer has introduced an extra connector (Sata Drive to hot-swap caddy connector) to the equation, the communication between drive and computer has become unreliable. If we could find a repeater to put inbetween the cable and our connector, we may be able to fix the problem.

                      Originally posted by Zool
                      How is your app limited to internal only?
                      We aren't integrators, we only manufacture single board computers and backplanes so we have no say in the customer's design. This particular customer is using a single chassis with hot-swap caddy's only so he can quickly swap out drives if need be.

                      That is all probably as clear as mud. Not sure my explanation is 100% correct.
                      My house is in Georgia but Wisconsin is my home.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        It makes sense. Just wonder what the data integrity would be like on a cable thats 6cm's longer and would reach.
                        Originally posted by 3irty1
                        This is museum quality stupidity.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Why not use firewire, then? Or some sort of digital connection where noise and signal length won't be factors.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Internal firewire?
                            Originally posted by 3irty1
                            This is museum quality stupidity.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Zool
                              Internal firewire?
                              Wait I am confused. Why is he using eSATA if its an internal drive?

                              Comment

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