Hi all,
I'm currently choosing a motherboard for my next build, and was wanting a board to support AT LEAST 8 hdd's. With most Intel boards, this leaves the optical drive on the outer, which is kind of ok, because I can use USB for the burner... but it also attracted me to Gigabyte's UD5 boards, which have 10 internal SATA ports (albeit some with port multipliers... I think).
So my question is, for those motherboards which have 'only' 8 internal SATA ports, but also 2 eSATA ports, can I use the eSATA breakout brackets which Gigabyte used to provide with older gen boards, using an eSATA cable to connect it externally with the eSATA port on the I/O panel, then use the internal cable (from the breakout bracket) that normally plugs onto the motherboard to plug in a hdd?
Kinda the way the bracket was intended... only backwards.
Thanks for any responses.
I'm currently choosing a motherboard for my next build, and was wanting a board to support AT LEAST 8 hdd's. With most Intel boards, this leaves the optical drive on the outer, which is kind of ok, because I can use USB for the burner... but it also attracted me to Gigabyte's UD5 boards, which have 10 internal SATA ports (albeit some with port multipliers... I think).
So my question is, for those motherboards which have 'only' 8 internal SATA ports, but also 2 eSATA ports, can I use the eSATA breakout brackets which Gigabyte used to provide with older gen boards, using an eSATA cable to connect it externally with the eSATA port on the I/O panel, then use the internal cable (from the breakout bracket) that normally plugs onto the motherboard to plug in a hdd?
Kinda the way the bracket was intended... only backwards.
Thanks for any responses.
