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The HP Community is where owners of HP products, like you, volunteer to help each other find solutions.
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I know! That's what others say!

 

Please click “Accept as Solution” on the post that solves your issue to help others find the same solution.
Click the “Thumbs Up” to say “Thanks” for helping!

 

(pun intended)

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part surfer was a dead end for this issue

 

however seems to be a good resource if you repairing and looking for HP replacement parts

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Hi,

 

If you look carefully at the below image, you will see that the OMEN 870-1xx series is provisioned to support three (3) physical hard drives. If you want use more three SATA devices then I suggest that you not use the optical drive if installed but instead use a USB connected optical drive. I even ran into this situation of not having enough SATA ports on a Z270 chipset motherboard and elected to use an USB optical drive.  I seldom use optical these days and more and more PCs are being sold without optical drives.  Optical is a dying technology. However if may still be beneficial to you. If the PCIe x1 slot is open in your PC then you could add a PCIe card to provide additional SATA ports.

 

omen 850-1xx drive cage.jpg

HP ENVY 6055, HP Deskjet 1112
HP Envy 17", i7-8550u,16GB, 512GB NVMe, 4K screen, Windows 11 x64
Custom PC - Z690, i9-12900K, 32GB DDR5 5600, dual 512 GB NVMe, gen4 2 TB m.2 SSD, 4K screen, OC'd to 5 Ghz, NVIDIA 3080 10GB
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yes this is where i have finally arrived at aswell

 

as a problem solver for me ... nice imaging btw

 

and this

 

" If the PCIe x1 slot is open in your PC then you could add a PCIe card to provide additional SATA ports."

 

nice option/idea 

 

thanx

 

 

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>  does anyone know where i can find an extra power supply on the mobo (or elsewhere on the harness)  to add a third drive in the spare 3rd  bay

 

Simple solution:   https://www.ncix.com/detail/startech-sata-power-splitter-6in-15-106638.htm

for: Startech SATA Power Splitter 6in

priced at $5.66 CDN (approximately $1 USA)   :Wink:

 

 

 

Connect the "middle" to one of your existing power leads, and each "end" to one of the SATA devices.

 

Edit: given how physically close that the connectors on the disk-drives are to the side-panel, it might be a tight fit to connect the SATA power connectors to the disk-drive, and then "curl" the wires away from the side-panel.

 

QED.

 

 P.S. Your motherboard, as pictured in: https://support.hp.com/us-en/document/c05331545

seems to have FIVE sockets for SATA devices.

 

 

 

 

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This is the single most annoying issue I've ever encountered after purchasing a new desktop computer. I have a 2008 Mac Pro that has 4 hot-swappable drive bays, and still runs like a charm, but I wanted to purchase an additional desktop in the Windows flavor because of my need for both machines as I cull a large photo archive from my decades as a professional photographer. I bought the HP Omen 870-1xxx series specifically because the tech specs indicated 4 drive bays inside the machine.

 

I opened it up, ready to install a new 3rd drive, and there's no SATA DATA cable, although there is a ribbon power cable that would allow installation of additional storage.

 

What am I missing? Only 3 SATA ports, one of which is connected to the Optical drive, and the two others to an 256 SSD and a skimpy 1T 7200 rpm HDD. Why bother with a power adaptor to another drive without the requesite SATA DATA cable?

 

I searched Startech and couldn't find a SATA data cable splitter, although did find the power splitter and ordered it for nothing. When people state there's a solution and point to a adapter/splitter, make sure you are stating that it's just for the power and not DATA, please. I'm computer/tech savvy, but am a Mac convert who's used to those 4 hot-swappable drive bays in Mac Pros of yesteryear. 

 

So it looks as if the PCIe card is the only real solution if I don't want to condemn my Optical drive by using that cable?

 

Man, HP, if you're going to publish specs on websites that indicate the presence of 4 drive bays, why not just come out and state that you aren't providing the required SATA DATA cables? I need tons of HDD space and could have accomplished my objectives to a limited degree with a NAS, however I deciced I wanted the option to edit large photo and video files on a newer machine. That's why I purchased the HP. But without the physical drives to hold those numerous, large files, and to catalogue my massive archives, I might as well go back to Mac and buy a NAS.

 

The graphics card appears to take up all but one PCI-e slot in the machine, as it's double height. It looks as though installing a card and then using a SAS splitter is an option if I want to install two more drives, but this is ridiculous. 

 

This is a nice machine, and probably more than enough for most users. But the advertising is what's getting my here. The tech were I bought the machine also told me that I could add two more drives.

 

And no, I'm not taking out the HDD, photographing the screws and posting it here. I know what they look like and so should you if you are advising in this forum.

 

Any suggestions re splitting or adding another SATA DATA cable (NOT power, as there are ample ports in the machine) would be greatly appreciated. Maybe I am missing something here and it's a simple fix, but I have looked everywhere and cannot find another SATA DATA port.

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> What am I missing?

 

The reference that I cited was for the 870-110, not for your 870-119 -- 4 SATA ports, versus your 3 SATA ports.

 

> Only 3 SATA ports, one of which is connected to the Optical drive, and the two others to an 256 SSD and a skimpy 1T 7200 rpm HDD.

 

> It looks as if the PCIe card is the only real solution, if I don't want to condemn my Optical drive by using that cable?

 

Not, there are other options.

 

The Other Person suggested an external USB-interface CD/DVD device, to free-up the SATA cable and the drive-bay.

 

Or, if you have a "home computer network", you can "share" an internal CD/DVD device on some other computer,

and then connect, over your network to that shared resource.  Obviously, not bootable via this "sharing" method.

 

Or, from: HP Desktop PCs - motherboard specifications, Odense2-S

there is One M.2 socket 1, key A.

If that socket supports M.2 SSD, then you can remove the 256 2.5-inch SSD, thus freeing-up one SATA port and one power-cable.

 

> Why bother with a power adaptor to another drive without the co-requisite SATA DATA cable?

 

For HP to save $2 by not including it. :Crying:

 

See: http://www.tigerdirect.com/applications/SearchTools/item-details.asp?EdpNo=7628510&CatId=11757

for $2, plus taxes.

 

> I searched Startech and couldn't find a SATA data cable splitter.

 

I have never heard of the existence of such a thing -- not since the stone-age of 40 (or 80) wire Parallel IDE cables.

 

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Thanks so very much, mdklassen!

 

I realized after I posted that the model of my machine is the

HP 870-213w

 

It has the same model number on the Motherboard, though, so I thought I was in the right neighborhood.

 

I did post another question with the right header for the correct model number, but let me reply to a few of the great suggestions you made.

 

The optical drive is a real issue for me because I have a lot of photos on CDs/DVDs that I need to move to HDDs, and I have a ton of them to get through and don't want to get slowed in the process. A network solution would be ok, but not ideal given how much equipment I already have on it - Come ot think of it, I already have a networked DVD player connected to my Apple Time Capsule router and TV that's also wireless. Gawd, it's horrible when you've got so much stuff you can't recall what you have.... but that's another topic.

 

I also don't want to use a precious USB 3 port because I have to connect several external HDDs and they will slow down with a lot of traffic if I use the hub instead of direct connecting to the machine (it's a pain to reach the USB 3 in the back, not the top of the machine).

 

Re the SSD - I will take a look and see what's in there. That's a great suggestion....

 

Also, I am not familiar with this device, but it might be something worth looking at because of my need to connect multiple drives. It's here: and it called a "Cable Matters Internal Mini SAS to SATA Cable (SFF-8087 to SATA Forward Breakout)"

 

I don't know if it would work or not. I found it by searching "SATA data splitter."

 

I assume that I am restricted in the SATA department in the same way as the one referenced due to 3 SATA ports on the motherboard. I know what these things look like, and have searched high and low to no avail. I just thought I might have missed something....

 

If you know anything about that device I posted a link to, and think its a viable solution, could you let me know? I'd really appreciate knowing my options before I take the SSD out and look at it. Less handling is better, imho. 

 

It's really wierd that there are extra power SATA cables, numbered, that would allow two more drives but without obvious SATA Data ports.... That's why I am quesioning my eyesight, and the jumbled mess of cables that are shoved in around the optical drive and power supply. Maybe I am just missing something here.

 

Thanks again, I appreciate the speedy reply!!

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