40 pins but 39 pin working
Usually two cables total. Such as the SATA Cable and the power cable. As for how many wires are in those cables, it would depends on the connection. Such as IDE have 40 wires. Power cables are usually four pin. It all depends.
Check for the interface that is used to connect it to the motherboard using the IDE cables. If it is a 40 pin or 34 pin cable, then it will be an IDE interface device
3 types of ribbon cables found in a PC are, a 34-pin floppy drive cable with twist, a 40-pin IDE cable with 40 wires, and a 40-pin IDE cable with 80 fine wires(80 conductor cable)A floppy drive cable, an IDE cable, and a CD or DVD drive cable
It has 40 Pins
It has 40 Pins
Under parallel ata, two types of ribbon cable are used. The 80-conductor ide cable has 40 pins and 80 wires Forty wires are used for communication and data, and an additional 40 ground wires reduce crosstalk on the cable. An older 40-conducror cable has 40 wires and 40 pins. the two types of cables are PATA and IDE cables which come in a 80-conductor IDE cable and a 40-conductor cable
Wires.they're all different. each cable has it's own name. the big fat cable is an IDE cable,the cables coming from the power supply are power cables, the super small 3 pin connector cables are fan power/control cables.
The red edge of a 40-pin ribbon cable is connected to pin one on the IDE hard drive. If you fail to do so correctly, it may result in the hard drive being completely unable to communicate with your system.
It depends, ones for hard drive are i think, about 40 pins, an less for the floppy IDE cable Desktop hard drives have "40" pin connectors; however, the actual number of pins is 39. There is one pin missing in the upper row, middle. I believe the reason for this is so the ribbon won't be connected upside down, it can only go one way.
1
Colour doesnt matter for the IDE. It is the number of pins that are available in the IDE slot If it is a 40pin IDE, it will support HDD and CD/ DVD RAM drives. If it is a 34 pin IDE, it supports the FDD
A floppy drive cable is typically a narrow, flat ribbon cable with a 34-pin connector, designed specifically for connecting floppy disk drives to a motherboard. In contrast, an IDE (Integrated Drive Electronics) cable is wider, usually 40 or 80 pins, and supports larger data transfer rates for hard drives and CD-ROM drives. IDE cables often have a distinctive connector with a keying mechanism to prevent incorrect insertion, and they can support multiple devices on the same cable, whereas floppy cables usually connect only one drive. Additionally, IDE cables may have a second connector to allow for a master/slave configuration, while floppy cables do not have this feature.