12G External Mini SAS HD SFF-8644 to SFF-8644 Cable, 1.5-m(4.9ft)
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Please refer to the SFF if your question is regarding it The 8644 to the Mini SAS SFF - One end of the 8088 cable is a 12Gb terminal, the other end is a 6Gb To connect my 6gb JBOD cabinet to my 12gb RAID controller, I plug in this adapter. The SFF - as I understand it There is only 6GB of storage on the 8088 terminal. The SFF A total of 8644 terminals are in use.
Selected User Reviews For 12G External Mini SAS HD SFF-8644 to SFF-8644 Cable, 1.5-m(4.9ft)
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(Updated/, A REVIEW IS UPDATED Discussions with the manufacturer led to the discovery that I had received an older version of the cable, which I had been using previously. The company sent me the newer version of the cables at no extra charge. After extensive testing with the new cables, which included significant cable movement and adjustment while the arrays were being built and running, no dropped drives or failures occurred. I have no complaints. Everything has worked smoothly. As well, I am happy to add that working with the supplier was a pleasure, because they were very professional and friendly. It would be my pleasure to do business with 10Gtek again in the future, and I would strongly Here is what I wrote from February 4, 2020
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In addition, (***NOTE A report like this one that hasn't been updated in a while is not up to date with current perspectives and does not contain all the information. The information is only kept on file for historical reasons. 2)
I have two LSI MetaRAID 9361/6361 A VMware host includes eight i8i cards, each linked to an Intel 36x expander card. To connect the expander cards to a separate chassis, I have two sets of cables (four in all). After I bought a similar set of cables from another manufacturer that cost two times as much as these ones, I decided to purchase these. Having found these cables by 10Gtek and seeing the price difference as well as the user reviews, I decided they would be a great addition to the second expansion card. Both cables have been in operation for a couple of The verdict is this These less expensive cables have disconnected many times, which caused arrays to need to be rebuilt. Fortunately, no data has been lost. These cheaper cables usually lose disks in the array the moment they are bumped or moved just a few inches in the middle portion of the cable (without touching the connection points). This leads to degraded arrays and a greater risk of data loss. In contrast, this has never happened with any cables from the company whose cables cost more. All those expensive cables are consistently kept connected to the drives even as they are moved.
It has been a couple years since I last used 10Gtek SFP and DAC. As part of my home network setup, I built a FreeNAS server A SAS IT mode card that has SFF support was on my shopping list My Dell MD1200 has 8644 connections on it, and my Dell MD4000 has 2 A total of 8088 connectors are available. The electrical connections are identical the form factor is different. When I plugged both drives into the same port, they were immediately detected. I like how there is a positive click between the sides to know that both sides are locked in, and I like a simple tab to release it. A second one is in the works for multi-families It is a type of path input/output.
My only complaint is that the design of the plug isn't perfect. The only problem I had was that only one of the plugs latched properly, the other was loose and wouldn't latch. I've noticed that one of the devices had a poorly designed socket which allowed the cable to plug to be inserted with the wrong orientation (180 degrees) which resulted in part of the plug bending slightly and the connector failing to latch when inserted correctly. So I am giving it 4 stars because I feel that the connector should have some kind of protective cover against getting damaged by the socket, but other than that,.
My SAS QNAP card had to be connected to my external expansion unit via a cable. In addition, QNAP's expansion unit is supplied with a long cable that does not connect directly to the company's SAS card. The cable is also long enough so that both units need not be contiguous as they would have needed to be if the supplied cable had.
There have been many times where we attempted to save money and then bought cheaper cables, only to have connectivity/speed issues. I switched to 10Gtek cables years ago, and after 100 or so cables have yet to receive a bad cable. Locking mechanisms that are solid and operate at the correct speed. A quality cable should deliver exactly what you are looking for. Although they are overpriced considering what they are, I still think they're worth buying.
I have purchased quite a few of these, and have never had.