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Product: Round Gold Braded ATA 66/100/133 Cables
Application: ATA Cables
Provided by:
CrazyPC
Review by:
Paul
Review date: June 1st, 2002
Round cables are great.
No more band-aids, no more cut fingers. Back in the early days of case modding, Scott, Mike and I used to set around at the Club with our razor blades
and hack up perfectly good IDE ribbon cable. We even got pretty fancy and
put some colorful heat shrink on our new "round" cables. They weren't true
round. We grouped them in four strand bundles and it kind of made them
square. Times have changed and now companies have made it so that someone
with no talent what so ever can have a cool looking case. I'm not bitter,
though. Great products like this make the modding community progress even
further. Now for you to have a truly nice modified case, that someone
can't just go buy, you have to be very creative. This is the way we
evolve. This isn't the type of cable you can sit down and make either.
These are nice professional cables.


Let me tell
you some things about IDE cables that you may not know. The
shielding on these cables is very important. If the cable is
not shielded properly, you will get noise. Noise will corrupt
files and ruin your file transfers. On the older ATA 33 cables
this was not a problem. The problem started with the faster
drives. The ATA66, 100, and 133 cables require proper
shielding. Now, you may have heard about the shielding, but
what about the length? Does the length make a difference?
It sure does. The max length of an IDE cable should not be
longer than 18 inches. What about those cables that are 24"
and longer? I don't own any of them. After 18inches your
data is more susceptible to corruption. Hey, maybe the 40%
fail rate on the IBM GXP series hard drives are related to long IDE
cables... NOT!!!

These cables fall within this standard. The longest cable they
have is 18" they also sent me a 12" floppy cable and a 12" IDE
cable. You may be wondering why we have such tall towers if
the max cable length is 18". These tall towers are considered
server cases, and server cases were designed more for SCSI drives.
SCSI drives don't have the same length restrictions as IDE.
Installing and
Testing
Installing these
cables are the same as most other cables. These are fairly
fool-proof. Each end is color-keyed and if you need to remove
them they have a nice pull tab on each end.

Testing was accomplished
to insure there wasn't any crosstalk or noise. I performed the
drive benchmark in Sisoft Sandra then burned a data disk from the
harddrive. Here are the results.
|
Flat
IDE cable |
|
 |
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Gold
Round IDE cable |
|
 |
I wasn't expecting the
performance to increase. I can not say that my benchmark score
went up 2000 points just because I put these cables on. Take
these results how you want. My main intention was to make sure
the performance didn't decrease. They certainly didn't
decrease. Now, the burn test.
I took 4 files from my harddrive totally 700MB and burned them to my
mitsumi 24x12x40. Again, the purpose of this test is to check
for data corruption and "noise" which would slow down, if not stop,
the burn. The same media and the same files were used in both
burns. Nero 5.5 was the burn program used.
|
Flat
IDE cable |
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Start to finish time:
5:24 |
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Gold
Round IDE cable |
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Start to finish time:
5:25 |
1 second is nothing to
worry about. The slow time is a result of the 16x media used.
From the results of my two benches I think it's safe to assume there
is no cross-talk or noise from these cables. Plus they look
very cool.

I have nothing negative
to say about these cables. They are within the 18"
specification and they are only $9.95 each. Pick your set up
at CrazyPC!
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