![]() There were a few where the adapter chip wouldn't allocate beyond 137GB, this is mostly because they completely emulate a disk and fake the on-disk format (but do pipe the data to the underlying disk just fine). ![]() Most issues were with unstable power for the adapter (resets during bootup) if it didn't have good DC-DC circuits on-board. Also one m2 adapter but only the sata variant have not seen a NVMe to IDE adapter yet. Also used a 1.8 to 2.5 adapter, a CF adapter (but that is easy) and SD adapter. Or as experienced and friendly commentator John Keates says: ![]() ![]() This one is reported as being used just the way you intend to: in a PowerBook G4, but sitting a little tightĪdaptare 46235 mSATA-SSD 2,5 Zoll IDE-Controller 44-Pin Adapter You might also want to check whether it fits into your machine. Initially I thought those models would still be limited to 120GB supported capacity, but some vendors offer up to 480GB for a model of that range. Those adapters should work in principle for PowerBooks of that glorious PowerPC era.Īlthough you might want to doublecheck your exact model.Īpple PowerBook G4 1.0 12" (DVI - Al) Specs
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |