My new cloning station

coffee

Well-Known Member
Reaction score
1,832
Location
United States
Finally got around to spring cleaning since the weather is turning warmer. During the winter things get a bit cluttered in the shop. Spring Clean means that its time to get my hard drive dock off of my daily driver and onto a seperate computer.

I had been using a USB3 connection to the dock station which I really dont care for. Sure it worked ok but I much prefer eSATA. So, I had a dual core dell arrive at the shop that is to be replaced by a newer computer at a company. This will make a perfect clone station and all around drive maintenance computer. Therefore, I cleaned up the workbench and started sorting junk to be thrown out. Cleaned up the new clone computer and installed Linux Mint for the O/S. Then shoved on TV to access it from my daily driver.

clone-station640.jpg

I also had an old Toshiba laptop (single core!) come in as junk. I plan on pulling the webcam from it and installing it at the shop bench so I can record or just broadcast when Im at it for interested party's. This brings up a good note -

For laptops that you are scraping out make sure you pull the webcam in the screen area. Some of these also have a built in mic on the same board. Just take a USB cable and cut off the square end and splice it to the camera wires. This makes a great small cam that you can position anywhere and use it. The wiring diagrams are available online about anywhere. The color codes are standard pretty much too. Most of what I have done are just the camera and not included a microphone. So, Just have to do a bit more thinking on how that would wire up if you wanted to use it. Probably a separate cable would be needed.
 
I'm a big user of eSATA docks but they aren't as plug-n-play as they are supposed to be. Hot plugging a drive in my Core 2 machines requires me telling Device Manager to look again as it won't be seen by the OS until I do. Unplugging is also an issue. Device Manager needs to be involved.
 
I'm a big user of eSATA docks but they aren't as plug-n-play as they are supposed to be. Hot plugging a drive in my Core 2 machines requires me telling Device Manager to look again as it won't be seen by the OS until I do. Unplugging is also an issue. Device Manager needs to be involved.

Then you should be running linux. On linux you can watch as it mounts a drive you have inserted by:

tail -f /var/log/syslog

1. Insert the drive
2. Turn on the drive (mine has seperate on/off button for each of the four drives)
3. Watch the log file in real time and it will show info about the drive and finally assign a block device to it (/dev/sdX).

When you are done with the drive just shut the power off to it.
 
Then you should be running linux.

I do run them on Linux and I have to manually mount them (more of a PIA than Device Manager in Windows). ...and if I pull the drive before shutdown the system(s) hang on shutdown.

USB is much easier in both OSs but I still prefer to work with SATA.
 
I have a selection of docks (Thermaltake, Inatek, Sabrent, Orico). They all behave the same on a Core 2 Duo and a Core 2 Quad (bench machines). I probably need to update the BIOS(s) or move to something newer.
 
I have a separate pci card for my external eSata. I tried the card in my new Ryzen rig (daily driver) and as soon as I turned on a drive in the external station it was crash the sata bus and reboot the computer. I think this is a bio's issue and there is an update but I just had the older dell computer come in and just set that up instead.

I bet the bios update would fix your issue.
 
I have a separate pci card for my external eSata.

...and I just run SATA extenders which may be part of the problem as my docks may be recognized as SATA and not eSATA. I should give a PCI eSATA card a try.

41uB8GlTcAL.jpg
 
Back
Top