…will void the warranty of your SATA SSD.
But how then connect the SATA connector of the HDD/SSD with the 44-pin IDE connector on the other side? The solution could have been quite simple: use a 44-pin ATA/IDE cable.
How to open a mac mini g4 install#
So I though that it might be a possible solution to install the SATA HDD/SSD turned by 180° with the connector towards the speaker in front. A show stopper would be if the adapter doesn’t fit in at all, because its connector is placed as such that the adapter is displaced in relation to the HDD/SSD, making it impossible to fit them both at the same time. Another problem could be the height of the adapter and the resulting displacement of the 2.5 inch HDD or SSD. Such an adapter would therefore have to be very small in dimensions. The problem: the Mac mini G4 doesn’t provide much space for additional adapters. So, a solution is to use an adapter to convert from 44-pin IDE to SATA. That is very unfortunate, especially since the Mac mini G4 came with drives of 40 to 80 GB capacity, which is not much compared to today’s standards (2015).īut, once you decide to upgrade, you face the current market situation, where IDE 44-pin 2.5 inch HDDs are much more expensive than regular 2.5 inch SATA HDDs or even 2.5 inch SATA SSDs! The strategy, in theory…
One of the problems of the original Mac mini (2005, G4 PowerPC processor) is that it still uses 2.5 inch parallel ATA (PATA) drives.