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IDE > SD

What machine you have it on?

I can see this working on a G3/G4 iBook or PowerBook but not on anything older than a Wallstreet. What is the Master/Slave switch set for? Set it to Master if you can an see it is works. There are problems with IDE->SD and CF->SD converters on older Macs, because the IDE on the older Mac is not a perfect IDE as in a PC.

This is why I prefer a IDE SSDs, CF->IDE converters, CF->PCMCIA converters and PCMCIA FlashRAM cards, they do work on the older Macs. I've only heard of 1 SSD not working on an old Mac. It's posted somewhere on the forum.

 
Yeah.  Kanga.  Either Master or nothing (which would default to Master?  I don't know.)

Wait which are you saying would work?  I was thinking of trying IDE > CF, but this isn't really an urgent issue.

 
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Why SD?  You'll have little to no compatibility issues with an IDE --> CF adapter in any PowerBook.

 
If the SD -> IDE Adapter does not work on any Pre OSX Mac, then what good are they for those machines?

But I know that CF -> IDE does work for anything with an IDE Interface on a Mac PowerBook - From the 190/5300/2300c to the Wallstreet/Pismo G3s, and even the 180PB (or is it the PB150 that has the IDE Interface?) all work with the CF -> IDE Adapter. And those machines with PCMCIA, the CF -> PCMCIA also work as a bootable drive. PCMCIA Flash Memory cards also work as a bootable Drive. The only drawback is the Powerbook 520/540/550 PCMCIA Adapter does not work as a bootable drive but does as a storage drive. These 500s series Powerbook also work with the CF -> IDE Adapter if they have the IDE interface in them.

Here is my 1400 booting from a CF on a CF -> !DE Adapter.

https://68kmla.org/forums/index.php?/topic/23406-booting-from-a-compact-flash-drive/?p=244873

You can get these CF -> IDE adapters from ebay for $3 or so. More details on how is on that forum thread. IDE SSD also work but not all, I know KingSpec SSDs do work on the older Macs. And like I stated above, the CF -> PCMCIA adapters also work but this adapter is more expensive on ebay, about $10 a piece.

 
Thanks. Although just to clarify, I found discussion of a driver for a particular standard that does not work pre OS X. I don't know that this device doesn't work with the machines/OSs.

 
FYI, in addition (this is partially off-topic, by the way...) in addition to SD cards being way cheaper overall, they are also (as far as I can tell) objectively faster than CF cards.  In other words, one cannot find CF cards as fast as the fastest SD cards - and those SD cards are still generally cheaper than slower CF cards.  They're also smaller.  I really don't understand the preference for CF cards - though I have had better luck with them so far on Macs.

 
That would depend on the interface and the SD and CF speeds. There are 1000X Speed CF Cards (used in high speed motion photography) that can out perform any SD card out there. But it still remains - the speed of the IDE Interface is the maximum allowable speed possible.

On older Macs, the IDE can be 33MB/s, 66MB/s, and you wont see 100MB/s until you reach G4 systems. Thus the fastest CFs you can put on these machines are 200x, 400x and 500x. Another problem is that the CF>IDE interface may have some issues of missing lines. For the fix, see: http://www.fccps.cz/download/adv/frr/cf.html

But this is only for DMA/UDMA support on IDE. This is not supported on an IDE that is 33MBs in speed; which on Macs is all the 040 Powerbook. It is also on the PowerPC PowerBooks up to the 1400. So you are stuck at 33MB/s when CF > IDE on these machines, that means that putting a 200X CF is the fastest you can put in as anything faster is just a waste as the higher speed will not be seen. (This applies to PCs as well as Macs.)

Using an SD card, even if it is faster an CF, you will hit this brick wall head on - it will never be faster than the interface speed allows. So you will be stuck in the same place I am. At least I can get from a CF Boot times of under 15 seconds on a G3 with OSX, and under 30 with my 190 and Wallstreet G3 but that is because there is a long pause of over 15 seconds between the Happy Mac icon and the loading of the first icon. Once it passes that pause, the extensions load up rapidly!

The SD > IDE should work on the Macs with IDE. Though there are a few rare cases when adapters do not work, in those I tried they do (Note: I have not used an SD > IDE Adapter yet). 90% of the stuff I used work. There is an occasional bad unit in the group, which is why I buy more than one.

You should see if that SD > IDE adapter you works on a PC before moving it to a Mac. And if your Mac has PCMCIA, you should have a SD>PCMCIA to try out as well. Macs can boot from PCMCIA. PCs cant without some difficulty.

Lastly, it's an IDE Interface adapter. There should be no driver and be plug & play. When did you had to install a driver for  hard drive?

 
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I was referring to modern SATA standards.  Either at II or III speeds, I believe no CF card currently on the [consumer] market [*]can perform a comparably priced SD card.  But it's possible there are a few exceptions.  The $50 32gb 300MB/s SD card I got can outperform any other CF card currently on the market (there's a 64gb and 128gb model but they're prohibitively expensive).

But either way, I think my point still stands - any SD card that could max out any of those bus speeds (to switch back to IDE and old Powerbooks) is cheaper than a comparable CF card.

[Also, I've found that a $10 SD > CF adapter works perfectly in that respect - giving both the benefits of cost for the SD card and compatibility for the CF adapter (i.e. you use the CF adapter on the Powerbook, but the SD card adapted to that adapter - sorry if that's not clear).]

[* SSDs can outperform retail-market flash memory.]

 
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I'll take a guess that the bridge chip in some of these adapters aren't so friendly to non-x86 implementations of IDE, which would be all the pre-PCI Macs equipped with IDE. There is zero reason for needing faster cards when working with old machines. They are all going to be bottlenecked by a slow interface, most of which are PIO Mode 0 (its doubtful Apple went any higher on 630 series machines) and top out at 3.3MB/sec. Almost all of the speedup comes from the near-zero seek times that flash media has compared to hard drives.

 
Sure but there are two issues: one is maximal performance - and the further back one goes the less relevant that is; the other is parity - SD cards are still cheaper.

 
Maximal Performance? Its like driving an Indy/F1 Car in a 20MPH Zone and you can't break the Speed Barrier!

It depends on where you get the SD Card. I get 8GB CF cards for under $10, and 8GB is all I need on a Powerbook laptop. For OSX laptops, 32GB or 64GB which I can get for under $50. Might be higher than a SD Card but it works for me.

I know people who went out and brought the largest hard drives and down loaded all the software they could get, and never used any of the crap. One I know had all the Photoshops for the Mac and PC from 2.5 to CS-3 on his hard drive, and does not use it because he does not know how too. When I asked why he had it, he say, "Just in case, maybe one day I'll use it. But right now it's there... doing nothing."

 
Right... So per your analogy ("Might be higher than a SD Card but it works for me.") it's not at all like driving an Indy/F1 car in a 20... or rather it is, except you're arguing for the Indy/F1* and I'm arguing for anything that goes 20mph or higher but costs considerably less...  Per your friend... you seem to be arguing he bought stuff he didn't need.  I'm saying I think SD cards basically give better bang-for-the-buck and otherwise satisfy the same needs.  (Cheapest 8gb SD I found via Buy It Now on eBay was $4 btw.)

I was just trying to point out something I'd observed, though.  I didn't realize I was entering such contentious ground lol.

*I'm not only saying go out and get a 300MB/s card - I'm saying that per transfer rate, SD is considerably cheaper.

 
I'm happy with the set ups I have and the money I spent to get there.

The question is, what other options are you looking into to. If SD > IDE does not work for your Mac, what other SD > IDE options are you looking into? I've seen a SD > CF which in theory can be used in CF > IDE Adapters and CF > PCMCIA Adapters. If they work on the Mac, this would be just an option.

The question is, are SDs more reliable than CFs? I got CFs that are over 5 years old and a couple approaching 10 and they are still up and running. And I had SDs die months after use in my camera. At the same time I'm using SDs in the Raspberry Pis that I have and so far they are holding strong. Though SDs have improved and now uses the same Flash RAM technology as CFs, there is no argument here. It's more of a preference.

Now I stated how it should be with SD through what I know with CFs. If your SD > IDE Adapter is not working, then you need to find out why. Theories and points of known facts have been posted. Your only option if you still what SDs in your IDE Mac is to get a couple more IDE Adapters of different kinds/builds/name brands and experiment to see what works and what does not.

Except for the SSB Computers like the Raspberry Pi and Beagle Bone, the only computers using Solid State Devices are in China; they are the biggest producers of SSD Equipment, Media and Adapters; mostly for their on market! 

Now, I think SD > IDE should work on a Mac. There is SD2SCSI and that works for Mac. So the IDE version should work. But there are problems one needs to iron out.

 
I will actually look into SD2SCSI. I've heard of that before. A lot of my SCSI drives have failed recently. The CF adapters I have work for IDE. Fair point on reliability though. I don't know. I have one SD card from before last month or so. It's 10 years old or more from a camera. Still works fine but overall who knows.?

 
Couple things, compact flash is IDE. Any vintage computer running CompactFlash as a hard drive will be fast. Vintage I/O is slow. CF CompactFlash to IDE adapters are nothing more than a pin to pin . CompactFlash adapters should only be a dollar or maybe slightly more. Also keep in mind there are various speeds of CompactFlash. If you'd like to obtain some inexpensive CompactFlash , then go to the bay and type in compact flash lot . I bought like 10 CompactFlash cards for next to nothing . They were used but they all formatted and tested perfectly .

 
Performance from CF and SD cards on vintage machines can be slow even if they are rated ridiculously fast speeds. Reading is almost always quick, its the writing speeds that suffer. Flash media is designed for large blocks of linear writes, not small blocks of randomized writes that a computer typically uses. I have a "x133" CF card here that appears to be slower at writes on a Windows 98 machine then a mechanical hard drive from 15 years ago.

 
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