ID | | Article Title | Post Date |
36 |
| What are the benefits of supporting Spread Spectrum Clocking (SSC)? | Mar-02-10 |
37 |
| Is it possible to boot from a volume that resides on the Tempo SATA card? | Mar-02-10 |
39 |
| Can I hot-swap a disk drive that is attached to any Sonnet Tempo Serial ATA card? | Mar-23-10 |
40 |
| How does hot-swap functionality work? | Mar-02-10 |
404 |
| The Sonnet Tempo SATA card does not work with my Western Digital My Book Premium ES Edition, or Seagate Technology FreeAgent Pro. | Mar-02-10 |
406 |
| Do I need to power off a Tempo SATA ExpressCard/34 adapter in a MacBook Pro before I eject it? | Mar-02-10 |
| Failure to power off a Tempo card before ejecting it may have an unpredictable result for OS X.
You should follow these steps:
1. Unmount any drives attached to the Tempo card by dragging them to the Eject icon in the dock.
2. Click the Card's icon in the menu bar and select "Power Off Card" from the drop down menu.
3. Push and release the Tempo card to eject.
|
  |
459 |
| The performance of my drive array is significantly less than I expect. | Jun-14-11 |
491 |
| Are Sonnet Tempo SATA cards compatible with the Drobo S? | Feb-02-11 |
544 |
| How do I uninstall the Sonnet Pro SATA Driver? | Dec-26-10 |
628 |
| Why doesn't my Sonnet ExpressCard/34 card work in the Echo ExpressCard/34 Thunderbolt Adapter? It's listed as compatible! | Aug-11-17 |
645 |
| Are Tempo SATA/SAS cards supported under Windows 7 or Windows Vista under Boot Camp on unibody MacBook Pro computers? | Feb-21-12 |
| No |
  |
653 |
| I connected a Red Station media reader to the eSATA ports, but the media would not mount. How do I mount the media? | May-06-13 |
| Mac OS 10.7.5 will not mount FAT32 volumes connected to the eSATA ports of this device. (FAT32 volumes mount fine in 10.6.8 and in 10.8.2 and later.)
As a workaround, you can manually mount volumes with the following procedure:
1) Open terminal (Applications > Utilities > Terminal)
2) Run the following command:
diskutil list
Look for the target volume in the IDENTIFIER column. The volume will have a name like disk4s2.
3) Create a mount point by using the following terminal command:
mkdir /Volumes/myvolume
Note: myvolume is the name of the mount point you will create and must be unique - for example, you cannot mkdir /Volumes/FAT if a volume named FAT is already mounted.
4) Mount the target volume with the command:
sudo mount -t msdos /dev/disk4s2 /Volumes/myvolume
Note: disk4s2 is the from the IDENTIFIER column from step 2. myvolume is the unique name you chose in step 3.
The volume should now be mounted and is available for use. The volume must also be unmounted through terminal - finder will not be able to unmount the volume.
The command to unmount the volume is:
sudo umount /Volumes/myvolume
where myvolume is the mount point you created in step 3. |
  |
659 |
| eSATA drives won't mount after updating to OS X 10.7.4 | Jun-22-12 |
778 |
| I have a 17" MacBook Pro 6,1 and my ExpressCard does not work after upgrading to Mavericks. | Dec-30-13 |
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