SCSI to SATA?

l008com

6502
What are people doing these days to put SATA drives in old 68K Macs that only have internal SCSI?

In my PowerMac 7300, I just put an IDE PCI card in there, then use a cheapo IDE to SATA inline board to run that machine off of a 2.5" SATA laptop style drive. A drive that is dirt slow in a modern Mac but is insanely fast for the late 90s :)

But if I get a 68K Mac to run as a suuuuuper low power web server project, I'd still want to run it off of a modern drive. But it's not going to have PCI slots.
I don't have a specific Mac picked out but lets say something like a Quadra 650. A few NuBus slots but no PCI. I assume there is no such thing as a NuBus/ATA-IDE card? When I google it, all I get is a link back to a very old post in this very forum.

Are there any solutions?
If there are solutions, are any of them sanely-priced?

If not, then am I really stuck with finding super old SCSI-2 3.5" hard drives that somehow haven't shit the bed yet?
 
There are plenty of options for modern hard drive replacements, what about a Blue or Zulu SCSI, install a high quality SD card and you're away.
 
What are people doing these days to put SATA drives in old 68K Macs that only have internal SCSI?

In my PowerMac 7300, I just put an IDE PCI card in there, then use a cheapo IDE to SATA inline board to run that machine off of a 2.5" SATA laptop style drive. A drive that is dirt slow in a modern Mac but is insanely fast for the late 90s :)

But if I get a 68K Mac to run as a suuuuuper low power web server project, I'd still want to run it off of a modern drive. But it's not going to have PCI slots.
I don't have a specific Mac picked out but lets say something like a Quadra 650. A few NuBus slots but no PCI. I assume there is no such thing as a NuBus/ATA-IDE card? When I google it, all I get is a link back to a very old post in this very forum.

Are there any solutions?
If there are solutions, are any of them sanely-priced?

If not, then am I really stuck with finding super old SCSI-2 3.5" hard drives that somehow haven't shit the bed yet?
I've not heard of any way to get SATA in a 68k Mac, but like Byrd says, there are a number of SCSI SD adapters available.

ZuluSCSI, MacSD and BlueSCSI have multiple options available.
 
But if I get a 68K Mac to run as a suuuuuper low power web server project
I didn't spot this, if the objective is a 68k web server, that's fine...

If the objective is "suuuuuper low power"... I don't think a vintage Mac is the best answer :LOL: Old doesn't always mean low power. I've seen modern machines hundreds of times more powerful than a 90s Mac draw less power than the standby / powers off draw from a 90s Mac!

You might do better with a modern Arm Single Board Computer of some description, or a low power x86 "Nuc" style computer.
 
SCSI to SATA adapters do exist, but they're rather expensive and very overkill for the SCSI-1 bus in a 68k mac.
 
Back
Top