149°
Posted 2 days ago

30cm 15-pin SATA to 2 x 15-pin SATA power cable + 60cm 7-pin SATA 3 data cable 6 Gbit/s 90° angled + 60cm 7-pin SATA 3 data cable 6 Gbit/s

£2.88
Shared by
SelfScanStan
Joined in 2013
7,841
4,107

About this deal

About this item
  • 15-pin SATA to 2x 15-pin SATA power cable 30 cm + 7-pin SATA data cable 90° angled 60 cm + 7-pin SATA data cable 60 cm
  • Serial ATA 3 standard (1.5 Gbit/s, 3 Gbit/s, 6 Gbit/s), nylon sheathed, colour: black
  • Ideal for connecting hard discs (SSD, HDD) and drives (CD, DVD, Blu-Ray)
  • 36 months manufacturer warranty
Amazon More details at

Community Updates
Edited by a community support team member, 2 days ago
New Comment

7 Comments

sorted by
's avatar
  1. Beamish's avatar
    Good deal if you need it. Personally I have way too many SATA cables of one type or another and trying to have a clear out. If anyone needs any PC cables and will pay for postage, DM me and I'll see if I have what you're after
    DisagreeableRunt's avatar
    We all have a massive box of cables. You never know, you might night a parallel or serial cable again one day!
  2. fablanta's avatar
    This splits a SATA power connector so you can have one extra 3.5 inch HDD connected to your system.
  3. jasee's avatar
    "Ideal for connecting hard discs (SSD, HDD) and drives (CD, DVD, Blu-Ray)"

    These cables won't work for for a standard cd, dvd or blu-ray, the power connector on the drive, if it's standard, is much smaller.
    Loafus's avatar
    The most common connection types for internal desktop optical drives are standard SATA data and power, which these are. If you are referring to 12.7mm SATA power, that is only used on slimline drives designed to be used within a laptop.

    Occasionally, prebuilt OEM machines by the likes of Dell or HP will use one of these slimline drives which has a 12.7mm power connector. however, this is non-standard for desktop use.

    The only other standard connectors used for this purpose in a typical desktop are 4-pin molex for power and IDE for data, but that's more common on older drives (usually used CD drives) and in those cases, it would make sense to pick up a more modern drive anyway.
's avatar