Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter - does it exist yet?

Has anyone actually made a Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter that you can purchase yet? I know it's early days, not complaining, just hoping hoping......

FireWire does provide power to connected devices, up to a specified limit (though I don't know what the limit is myself). This is why properly designed portable FireWire hard drives are able to be used without external AC power.
FireWire will never be able to move data at Thunderbolt speed.
Up to now, every Mac that has a Thunderbolt port also has a FireWire 800 port, with the exception of the two current MacBook Air models. For people who buy those MBAs and already have FireWire devices, a FireWire-to-TB adapter would be useful. For those with other TB-equipped Macs, not so much.

Similar Messages

  • Does the Apple Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter work w/ W540?

    I have an external storage drive that relies on Firewire 800, or USB 2.0 - I'd prefer to use the Firewire! I discovered the Apple Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter ( http://www.amazon.com/Apple-Thunderbolt-to-FireWire-Adapter/dp/B008RXYOKY ), but I haven't seen any clones for sale... Does anyone know if it will work with the W540 and Windows 7?

    Hi DIgitalsmear
    I bought one of this adapters to connect my firewire audio interface to my lenovo carbon X1 which has a thunderbolt out. And atm i have no proper connection going on, but i'm not yet sure whether it is because of the adapter or something else.
    greetings
    Milan

  • Does the Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter work on windows?

    I'm planning on buying an Asus G55VW-DH71 gaming laptop, which has a thunderbolt port. I would like to be able to control my PreSonus digital audio mixer with it, and unfortunately, it only has a firewire for connecting to it. So, I would want to connect Apple's Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter into the laptop and the mixer's firewire cable.
    Does the adapter work on windows 7/8?
    Also - getting a macbook is out of the question.

    I have pretty much the same need as you and purchased a HP laptop with Thunderbolt port and Windows 8.  I also picked up the Apple Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter.  I have been unable to get Windows to detect the Firewire side of the adapter.  Windows 8 seems to pick up the Thunderbolt controller correctly and shows it as an extension of the PCI express bus.
    I have found no set of drivers that I can add that will get the Firewire side to be recognized by Win8.  Win 8 should have 1394b drivers native, so I don't know what the problem is.  I wish I could get this to work, because I just don't have the option of getting a MacBook for the things I need to do.
    Right now the only other Thunderbolt to Firewire option on the horizon seems to be the Belkin Thunderbolt Express Dock, but that has 2 problems.... 1, it is still in pre-order and 2, it is ~$300.
    Mike

  • Anyone heard word on a Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter yet?

    Anyony heard word on the release of a Thunderbolt to FireWire adapter yet?  (Aside from the Sonnet Echo for $250.00 including card.)
    Also, I was reading online and I found an older article that read "The Thunderbolt port is identical to a Mini DisplayPort, so any Mini DisplayPort cable or adapter will work."  Is this true, or is this old news?

    Just picked up an apple thunderbolt to FW 800 adapter that I am going to return.
    I was hoping it would work on my setup.
    2.66 Ghz core i7 MBP, 10.7.5,
    JVC SR-VS30U deck that uses a 4 pin firewire cable.
    a  WD 4TB mybook and an OWC on the go pro external drive.
    Both are FW 800 and neither come up when I plug them in and no thunderbird hardware was found when I do a system report.
    I was hoping that I could capture from my deck (4-pin FW) to my chained FW 800 drives. Like I can if there is a 6 pin FW device in chain.
    I thought seperating the HD's with thunderbolt could do it, but it doesn't see the drive.
    Oh well...

  • Can I import video from a Firewire camcorder using the Thunderbolt to Firewire Adapter?

    I have an older camcorder that has a firewire interface. My new iMac does not have any firewire ports. Can I import video from the camcorder using a Thunderbolt to Firewire Adapter or is the Thunderbold adapter only used for hard drives and displays?

    Rather than an adapter, I would suggest you purchase a 4 pin to 9 pin Firewire 800 cable to run from the camera to the Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter. Those FW 400 to 800 adapters frequently do not work so well for importing video in my experience.
    The Firewire cables are pretty inexpensive if you get them online. For example try Monoprice.
    http://www.monoprice.com/products/product.asp?c_id=103&cp_id=10301&cs_id=1030104 &p_id=3541&seq=1&format=2

  • Apple no longer making thunderbolt to firewire adapter!

    I just visited an apple store today to be told that Apple are no longer making the thunderbolt to firewire adapter which was meant to be released this month (July). Calling Apple customer support also confirmed this. It is also no longer mentioned as a option, when ordering a new MBP retina on the Apple online store.
    As I've just purchased a new MBP retina for portable video editing, the prospect of not being able to plug in all my legacy firewire drives to the MBP is very frustrating, and I'm sure many people are in the same situation. Trying to daisy chain via a USB 3 LaCie drive to firewire did not work when tested and it's likely that any other solutions via hubs etc, will probably require mains power. For ediitng on the road via bus powered drives, firewire is suddenly not an option at present.
    Many of us have gone through these transitions before as Apple pushes new and better technology forward at the expence of backwards compatibility. Thunderbolt will be great, but curently it is expensive and not widely adopted, where as firewire drives are considerbaly cheaper than thunderbolt drives and many of us have a large number of these drives being used on a daily basis.
    I'm sure other manufactures will be scrabling to bring a thunderbolt to firewire adapter to the market, however the fact that Apple has stopped making it before it was even released is alarming.

    Styphin wrote:
    And yet, FireWire became an industry standard. Your argument is invalid.
    Key word highlighted (in comparison to "has become"). As Shootist points out, it is harder and harder to find any kind of FW device out there. Hence my soon to be orphaned 11 external HDDs, 2 of which only have FW and probably be unusable when I have to replace my current Mac. The rest fortunately have USB2 too and will have to function in a slow speed crippled mode when the time comes.
    Even Apple is hedging its bets, else why add two USB3 ports and the HDMI in addition to the purportedly wonderful TB?

  • Will the G-Drive Mini work with the Thunderbolt to FireWire adapter?

    I'm closing in on buying a new MacBook Pro, but the lack of FireWire on the new retina models is worrying me. I've seen a lot of negative responses in regard to the Thunderbolt to FireWire adapter, specifically in regards to the G-Raid mini - most of them noting it's the dual drive that's the issue.
    So would any of you happen to know - does a G-Drive mini work well with the Thunderbolt to FireWire adapter? I will be doing a lot of heavy video editing if that makes any difference.

    I found out after purchasing a Retina MacBook Pro that you can in fact use the G-RAID Mini, the way to do it is to have two Thunderbolt to FireWire adapters, plug in the first one to the drive and the computer, wait for the drive to start clicking, and then plug the other cable between the computer and the G-RAID on the second port.
    This obviously only works if you have a rMBP as you need the two Thunderbolt ports.

  • HT5299 Can 2 daisy-chained firewire-800 drives be connected to 1 Thunderbolt-to-Firewire adapter?

    Can 2 daisy-chained firewire-800 drives be connected to 1 Thunderbolt-to-Firewire adapter?

    Nightwatch (NL) wrote:
    Thanks Steve!
    One more question: Stayed throughput speeds more or less the same as original Firewire (since all my movies are on external disks) or has it become significantly slower?
    I haven't done a careful side by side quantitative comparison of what I had on the older Macbook Pro (which had three Firewire800 disks chained together via FW800) versus the new Macbook Pro (which has thunderbolt into which I have connected three FW800 drives daisy chained via the adaptor), mainly because my employer supplied me with these computers and required I turn in the old one when they replenished it with the new one. However, I can say this -- one of the FW800 externals is used for Time Machine, another for making entire disk clones, and the third is for misc storage. I have seen Time Machine start up during a disk clone (with SuperDuper) and there seems to be no impact. The disk cloning is generally pretty intensive on disk and cpu resources, but thunderbolt seems to have a much bigger capacity for throughput than firewire and hence can apparently accommodate multiple streams of FW800 data going back and forth with no apparent impact on each other. The main limit seems to be the FW800 speed itself, not thunderbolt. I see ~ 60 MB/s or more which is as much as I have ever seen on FW800. Ultimately, the ideal setup will be thunderbolt drives daisy chained together, I would expect hundreds of MB/s, but I don't see many of these thunderbolt drives on the market yet. Even better would be solid state drives ...

  • My thunderbolt to firewire adapter doesn't fit the firewire???

    I bought the apple store "Thunderbolt to FireWire Adapter" today.  I'm trying to put my old iMac in Target Mode and move old files.  The firewire cord doesn't fit into it???  I'm sitting here feeling pretty stupid and stumped?

    Your firewire cord is the wrong size.  Apple's cord is 800 port.  What size is your cord? 

  • Migration Assistant with Thunderbolt to Firewire Adapter?

    Hey gang-
    Finally retiring my mid-2007 iMac with a new Late-2013 iMac.   Yayyyy!
    I've always been happy with Migration Assistant, but wanted to ask the experts if Migration Assistant will work with the Apple Thunderbolt to Firewire Adapter.   I'm planning on connecting the old iMac Firewire 800 port to the new iMac Thunderbolt port via the adapter.  On a related note, I assume that same as always, I will need to boot the old iMac into Target Disk mode, right? 
    Thanks!
    Dave

    Of course. You can connect both iMacs with a FireWire 800 cable and a Thunderbolt to FireWire adapter without any problem. The problem would come if the old iMac has not got FireWire 800 ports, but the Mid 2007 iMac comes with one.
    In order to use Migration Assistant and transfer files from another iMac through FireWire, you need to put your old iMac in Target Disk mode as you said. To do this, simply hold the T key while your old iMac is starting up until you see the FireWire icon in the display. Then you can set up your new iMac, and you will be asked to transfer your data.
    If you have already set up your new iMac, use Migration Assistant (in /Applications/Utilities) > http://pondini.org/OSX/MigrateLion.html

  • Is there a thunderbolt to firewire adapter?

    Hi,
    First of all, I know there is an apple-thunderbolt-to-firewire-adapter but i'm looking for the opposite adapter.
    I have a 2010 imac and I'm about to buy a MBP but the problem I see is that my imac has firewire 800 and usb 2.0 ports, whereas the new MBP have thunderbolt and usb 3.0 ports. I need a new external hard drive to work with for editing with Final Cut, but most of them have thunderbolt or usb 3.0.
    - If I buy a hard drive with hunderbolt or usb 3.0 I can use it with the new MBP but not with my iMac, well yes but with usb 2.0 that is horrible to work with.
    - If I buy a hard drive with firewire, which are being excluded of the market (I've made a research and for example at Western Digital website they don't offer any HD with firewire at all) I should buy the new adapter firewire to thunderbolt from apple to use it with a MBP.
    The question is simple, as I see external hard drives with FireWire are being removed, and my 2010 iMac still works perfectly... do you know if there's going to be an adapter thunderbolt to FireWire that could connect a thunderbolt-external hard drive to my iMac's FireWire port??
    Thanks!!

    Have a look at theses drives, I understand you buy the drive with USB 3 and can then purchase a Thunderbolt adapter and a FireWire adapter. I think the drive plugs into the base unit in the photo which is the adapter. You could have the Firewire plugged into the old Mac and the Thunderbolt in the new one. Just swop the drive between computers.
    I don't know what speeds the drive spins at, if it is 5400 it may be too slow for you, but that is something you can decide.
    http://www.seagate.com/gb/en/external-hard-drives/desktop-hard-drives/backup-plu s-desk/#specs

  • No internet with Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter

    I bought a Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter, and i used it to connect a Iomega drive I previously used as USB.
    When running OSX, no problem.
    But when i boot the computer under Windows 7 (not SP1), if the adapter is connected, then the computer says that there aren't connections avalaible. If i boot without the adapter, everything worls fine and i can connect to my WiFi connection. (I don't have an Ethernet cable plugged, so i can't says if the Ethernet connection doesn't work too)
    Any suggestion? Has someone experienced this?
    Many thanks in advance!

    Of course. You can connect both iMacs with a FireWire 800 cable and a Thunderbolt to FireWire adapter without any problem. The problem would come if the old iMac has not got FireWire 800 ports, but the Mid 2007 iMac comes with one.
    In order to use Migration Assistant and transfer files from another iMac through FireWire, you need to put your old iMac in Target Disk mode as you said. To do this, simply hold the T key while your old iMac is starting up until you see the FireWire icon in the display. Then you can set up your new iMac, and you will be asked to transfer your data.
    If you have already set up your new iMac, use Migration Assistant (in /Applications/Utilities) > http://pondini.org/OSX/MigrateLion.html

  • Using thunderbolt to firewire adapter for target disc mode

    I need to transfer several GB of data from a 2011 iMac running OS 10.6 to a new Mac Mini running OS 10.9. Can I connect the older iMac to the newer Mini with a Thunderbolt to Firewire adapter and boot the iMac into Target Disc Mode and transfer the data to the new Mac Mini? I've used TDM with two Firewire machines, but not with a newer Thunderbolt to Firewire Machine using an adapter.
    Thanks for any input.
    --SL

    Hi Salnews,
    I've done quite a bit of research on this, as this is what I plan to do (only from a MBP on 10.9, but I don't think your situation would be any different) and everything I've read says the answer is yes.
    EDIT: I see you're on 10.6.7. You should update to 10.6.8 first.

  • Apple Thunderbolt to FireWire Adapter Compatibility

    Will the Apple external isight firewire web cam work on the macbook air through the Apple Thunderbolt to FireWire Adapter.

    If you are certain that your old iSight still works, yes ... if ...
    More info, see http://discussions.apple.com/thread/6520683.
    Message was edited by: EZ Jim
    Mac OSX 10.9.5

  • Can I use the new Apple Thunderbolt  to Firewire adapter to download video from a video camera by firewire to my Macbook Air ?

    Can I use the new Apple Thunderbolt  to Firewire adapter to download video from a video camera by firewire to my Macbook Air ?

    Yes, you can use the 85 watt adaptor. You cannot use the new adaptors because your computer is not equipped with the proper MagSafe connector. But you can use the older MBP adaptors as well as a 60 watt replacement adaptor. All can be found at Apple's Online Store.

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