Your cart is empty.
Your cart is empty.Rah1216
Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2025
Piece arrived with the issues working pretty well thanks!
Agustin
Reviewed in Mexico on January 26, 2025
Funciona excelente y funcional!
a reviewer
Reviewed in the United States on January 14, 2025
If you have someone who needs a backup (or expansion drive) attached to an all-in-one computer but that person hates cables this along with some velcro is your solution. Yep, just plug one end of this cable into an internal drive (like a Samsung 870 EVO) the other end into the computer and velcro the whole thing onto the back of the computer. Out of sight, out of mind. The included USB A to USB C adapter is a nice touch with a great add-on price (cheaper than buying separately.) Data transfer speeds are close enough to the USB 3.1 theoretical max to not matter.
Mathias LK
Reviewed in Sweden on August 7, 2024
Works just like expected
Taz
Reviewed in Australia on March 2, 2022
Does exactly what it is supposed to do. Nothing more to it. Worked straight away and has an indicator light when connected and flashes when transferring. Good value for more
Joshua
Reviewed in the United States on September 24, 2021
One reviewer of this adapter said that it did not allow SMART data to be viewed. This worried me, so now that I have one, I want to report for everyone else that this was not the case for me. I was able to view SMART data using CrystalDiskInfo, GSmartControl, and Speccy (Sabrent's USB 3.0 version, EC-SSHD, also supports SMART data, incidentally).If your preferred utility does not report SMART data for a particular drive, try a different one. GSmartControl is sometimes unable to report SMART data for a drive connected through an adapter while CrystalDiskInfo and Speccy have always been able to in my experience. I like GSmartControl because it also reports the SMART Error Log, which the other two don't as far as I can tell, and it can run self tests on the connected drive.Another reviewer, DScott, said that data transfer rates over the included USB-C adapter were extremely low. This, too, was not the case for me. I tested the transfer rates for a low-end SSD using CrystalDiskMark, and the 1GB sequential transfer rates for both connections were roughly the same - between 463MB/s and 563MB/s Read and 409MB/s and 416MB/s Write. Running the tests a second time often produced better results for some reason.Strangely, two of my three USB-C tests reported much lower Write speeds of 169MB/s and 183MB/s, but these are still much faster than the 35MB/s reported by DScott. I assume these lower Write speeds had something to do with the SSD not being TRIMed, which would mean the data blocks CrystalDiskMark wrote to had to be cleared first. One of my USB-C tests produced a write speed of 409MB/s, and all three produced fast Read speeds (in fact, slightly faster than my USB 3 tests), so I know the adapter can transfer data that fast.The RND4K Q1T1 Write tests were the only ones that were always slower over USB-C than USB 3, being about 7.5MB/s vs about 40MB/s. Only for Writes, though. I don't know enough to conjecture whether or not this is the adapter's fault, or the fault of a driver or something.This adapter does not seem to support TRIM commands according to TRIMcheck. From what I have read, very few SATA to USB adapters do. The StarTech USB312SAT3CB reportedly does support TRIM (I do not have one and so I cannot confirm this), but I like the design of the Sabrent adapter better, and I rarely use these adapters with SSDs, so TRIM support is not high on my priorities.I have been very satisfied with both this adapter and Sabrent's USB 3.0 version (EC-SSHD). I like the low profile design, the elegant, easily visible activity light, and the long 23" cable. I used my old Sabrent EC-SSHD adapter to make a custom external drive by making a faux leather case that holds the drive and adapter and has a cutout in the corner for the activity light. I have never had a problem with either adapter (though I have had this USB 3.1 EC-SS31 model for only a few days, and so I have not used it much yet).By the way, the activity light is not positioned on the corner shown in the product photo. That must be an old design or something. With the top of the adapter (the side with the Sabrent logo) facing you and the cord pointing away from you, the light is on the right corner, not the left as shown in the photo. This was important to me because I wanted my case design's activity light cutout to be compatible with both adapter models. It is.
ucanseemee
Reviewed in Singapore on July 30, 2021
Good product and workable....thank you.
IAMC
Reviewed in Canada on February 5, 2021
A recent upgrade of my laptop surplused an mSATA SSD. I wanted the flexibility to either use the old SSD in a 2.5" HD bay or via a USB connection so I also purchased the Sabrent mSATA to 2.5-Inch SATA III Aluminum Enclosure Adapter (model: EC-MSSA).The packaging was very good - the adaptor and attached USB cable were protected in custom cut high density foam. The USB cable is ~58 cm long and appears to of good quality construction. The USB type A 3.1 plug terminates one end and the other is permanently attached to the 2.5" SATA HD connector. A good quality (metal cased) USB A to USB C adaptor is included. There is a blue power/activity LED on one corner of the adaptor which has the appropriate brightness level. The connection to the SATA data/power connectors feels solid - there is no gap between the drive housing and the connector. However the strength of the connection is fully dependent on the actual SATA connectors so you must be careful not to bend or leave the drive unsupported so not to damage the connectors.I included a photo of the benchmark tests of a Samsung EVO 850 500Gb SSD connected via USB 3.1 port and USB C (HP Zbook15 G6). The USB C connection predictably had the best performance however USB type-A 3.1 was pretty close. The EVO 850 achieved 550 MB/s read and 417 MB/s write while installed in my old Zbook G1 laptop and using USB C, 517 read / 492 write. USB 3.1, 439 read / 430 write).Summary: quality is good, price is good and performance is very good = happy customer!
GBC
Reviewed in the United States on January 13, 2020
I bought the Sabrent EC-SS31 1.5" SATA hard drive/SSD to USB 3.1 adapter to clone the internal 128GB SATA SSDs on three Dell 9020M Optiplexes to new Samsung 860 EVO 1TB SSDs at work. The cable came with a USB-C adapter, which I did not use.The end of the year is always busy for our company. We find out if we can buy new toys, how much we get to spend, and push to get it all in before year-end for taxes. This year forced us from Windows 7 to Windows 10, but did not scream, "new computers". Instead the orders were "make what we have better and longer-lived". Wow. We put these boxes in service in December 2012. I had expected to replace them in 2017 but they've performed flawlessly. We maxed out the onboard RAM at the end of 2018. Now increasing storage was key to make this all work — unfortunately I had zero experience cloning drives. Oh, goody.After extensive research I decided to go with the Samsung 860 EVO 1-TB drives to replace the strained 128GB SSDs in the boxes. Reviews, spec tests, etc., all showed the 860 EVO to be superior in all respects regardless of size and 1-TB should give us ample head room for the next 5-7 years as actual data storage is served by a NAS. The userbenchmark.com site was invaluable for this.Having nailed that down the next step was how to connect the drive. The reviews I read here and elsewhere (including the site above) all indicated there were many makers of cabling, but Sabrent kept popping up over-and-over again as successful, no issues, well made, solid, dependable, etc. Shopping sowed pries all over the map, but the only maker that consistently performed well was Sabrent, regardless of price. That's why I elected Sabrent even though it was definitely not the cheapest.The last piece of the puzzle was the software. This was a real challenge, it seems everyone has their own favorite but they all had horror stories and "fixes" that mostly work — usually by hobbyists and gamers. Accronis was well thought of and available from Sabrent. Samsung also makes software specifically for this purpose that is free for use on their drives. That limits the reviews about Samsung's software, but what reviews existed were rock solid.Once I was done I had budgeted for the drives, the cable, the software as a purchase and three days of project time. I figured each machine would be down for anywhere from 3-8 hours.I was so wrong!The Dell's had 128GB Samsung SATA SSDs in them. The Sabrent cable hooked up perfectly. The free Samsung software was sophisticated, polished, easy, flawless, smooth, and fast. I mean really fast. The first box, which I expected to take 4-5 hours including unattended down time just doing the transfer, took 30-minutes including physically swapping the drives after the transfer was done. The transfer itself took under 10-minutes. The only reason that worked was because the Sabrent cable performed flawlessly.
Recommended Products