Hi, You know what i did ? I removed the HDD from the enclosure, and connected it to my Laptop, and voila Windows (2000PRO) detected it immediately (i expect some similiar behaviour in Linux too, probably with Kudzu!!). It says that it has found a "ATAPI-4 Bridge Controller". Also on study'ing several such products I found that the DC-in can be supplied with power from the PS2 mouse port as that has +5V supply and ground. so what i plan to do is take a 6-pin DIN for PS2 port and solder 2 pcs. of write running right upto a 5mm DC power plug and try to run the USB enclosure. I believe such a cable is bundled (with a PS2 port as "thru") with several products like -- Flash-card readers, Mini-disk readers, Simple-Tech USB External HDD, APD USB Port (PCMCIA) card etc. But I could not find one which I can buy separately.
What do you say Dmitiri ?? Do you think it'd work. Also yeah, I don't have the liberty of those good-old black-red wire bunch from the SMPS... I am have Laptops not PC (what is the world coming to!!). Since PS2 port should give (it's a TTL +5V) a stable +5v (regulated) supply i guess i should be fine (as long i put the reference ground from the PS2 port only :)). Thanks a lot for all your suggestions and great help. It's highly appreciated... Thanks to all. regards, bdutta --- >Quoting banibrata dutta <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > > Do you think i can power the USB enclosure externally with say a 6V >(500mA) > > supply, and that do the trick (i think most power adapters that you find > > with telephone/answeringmachine etc. fit that range, atleast in the > > US)...!!! > >You should NOT use +6V power supply, especially one for answering >machines, if you connect it to the cut +5V USB wire. This is because: > >a) The USB standard calls for +5V power >b) These power supplies are just transformers, with no regulator. > >What you need is a +5V regulated power source, which you can easily make >yourself from one of those 7-10V power supplies and the 7805 regulator >(with a heat sink). Just calculate the voltage drop on the regulator to >not exceed the regulator's max. dissipated power. > > > powering thru the IDE directly might be heck of a job for me, coz' i'd >have > > to saw apart the IDE connector or rip off the soldered leg. > >Your computer *already* has regulated and quite clean +5V and +12V >power. You can connect to there if convenient. Two black wires in the >middle of the connector are ground, two on sides are +5 and +12V. > >If you do so, be aware that you will be bypassing normal USB power >safeguards that shut off the power in case of overload. If the soldering >iron is not your best friend then maybe you should return the device and >buy something else, better designed :-) This one seems awfully half-baked. > >If you intend to connect the external power supply to the "DC In" >connector on the drive enclosure then it might work, but I do not know >what DC the device expects, so you'd better check the manual. The +6V DC >would be a little bit low in my book because you'd have next to nothing to >fall on the regulator (0.7V min.), and without that spare voltage the >regulator won't be effective - assuming that the enclosure has a regulator >inside. > >Thanks, >Dmitri > >-- >Be warned that typing 'killall name' may not have the desired >effect on non-Linux systems, especially when done by a privileged user. > (From the killall manual page) ><< attach3 >> _________________________________________________________________ Chat with friends online, try MSN Messenger: http://messenger.msn.com _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] To unsubscribe, use the last form field at: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/linux-usb-users
