USB to Firewire Adapter

I'm considering a MacBook Air. I have two Firewire backup hard drives and a original iPod that also uses Firewire. Is there a simple USB to Firewire adapter to enable use of these items from a MBA?

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  • USB to Firewire Adapter for camcorder?

    Can I use a "USB to Firewire adapter" to import footage from a USB ported Mini DV camcorder?

    You'll find one for shure<<</div>
    Don't they make microphones and other audio products?
    -DH
    http://www.shure.com/index.htm

  • Parallel to USB or Firewire Adapter?

    I'm trying to find one that works.
    I need to connect an Epson Expresson 836XL large format scanner to my Intel iMac. At first I was looking for a USB or Firewire to SCSI adapter, but then thought of this option since my scanner also has a 36-pin Centronics type parallel connector.
    I found a possible fit with the SCSI to Firewire adaptor (http://firewireshop.stores.yahoo.net/firfirscsico.html) but am wondering if Parallel to Firewire/USB might be a more viable (and cheaper) option. See here: http://sewelldirect.com/usbtoparallel.asp or http://www.monoprice.com/products/product.asp?cid=103&cp_id=10311&cs_id=1031104&pid=1610&seq=1&format=2
    Has anyone done this or know if it is viable? I worry about Mac compatibility.
    Thanks.
    Kort

    Kenichi Watanabe wrote:
    Since Macs never had parallel ports, why would the maker create Mac drivers for this scanner? If there are no drivers, simply connecting it would still not allow it to work. And you would actually need two drivers. One for the special adapter to make it pretend to be a parallel port and one for the scanner.
    As mentioned, the scanner also has SCSI ports which I had been using under 10.3.9. I had to move to Vuescan at that point since the OS no longer recognized the scanner with the Epson Drivers. I had hoped that using a parallel adapter, my iMac would just see it as a USB or Firewire device. Vuescan recommends the Ratoc SCSI to Firewire converter but I was hoping there might be a less expensive alternative.

  • USB to Firewire adapter for MacBook Air?

    I would like to switch to a MacBook Air, but I still need to use my video camera via firewire. I found out that there is no direct way to connect firewire to MacBook Air, isn't it?
    Then I have found PCMCIA cards supporting firewire connections. The remain question now is: Does a PCMCIA drive with USB connector exist where I can plug in the PCMCIA firewire card? It seems that such a kind of combination works for UMTS PCMCIA cards. But does it work also for firewire cards? Which adapter could work?
    Or is there any other way to get my camera working at MacBook Air?

    Hi Michael,
    I am facing the same difficulty.. would like to plug my camcorder on my mac book air..
    but without firewire... do not know how to proceed.. which is very annoying..
    I ll get back to you if I come across some useful info
    By for now

  • PCMCIA USB and Firewire adapter

    I have purchased a 250gb Iomega drive for all my music, but found USb 1.1 so slow (the Iomega is USB 2- and i should have got a firewire version). I bought a USB 2.0 and Firwire adapter. But like another post that I can transfer files at great speed and then it just freezes my Mac. Any ideas. I am a bit suspect about the adapter (off ebay) as the driver cd did not have MAc drivers!
    Any help would be appreciated...

    What would have been, and still would be, a better choice is a FireWire drive, which you'd be able to use with your built-in Firewire port and no adapter card. But since you're probably stuck with the Iomega drive now, at least you could make it useful to yourself by throwing away Iomega's USB 2 enclosure (housing, case, shell, box) and putting the hard drive mechanism that's inside it into a new FireWire-connected enclosure instead. Just Google "FireWire hard drive enclosure," and look only at models designed for 3.5" drives. You'll find dozens to choose from in the $30-50 range. Be sure to buy one that includes a FW cable.

  • USB to firewire for car charger?

    I have a car charger for my iPod that accepts a firewire cable. I'd like to charge my iPhone with the same device. Does someone make a USB-to-firewire adapter I could use? Any chance it would harm my iPhone?

    Bumping this once in hopes of getting an answer.

  • Is there a USB to Firewire 800 adapter?

    Hi,
    I've seen that I can get a USB external hard drive for much cheaper than a firewire800 one so was wondering if there is an adapter to plug a usb hard drive into the firewire800 port on my MBP so I can save my USB ports?
    Thanks in advance
    Simon

    No. No adapter exists to connect USB devices to a FireWire port; hubs which provide both USB and FireWire ports don't transfer any data between the interfaces.
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  • Will a USB 3.0 to FireWire adapter make my transfer rates faster?

    I have a MBP 2010 15 inch that only has a measly UB 2.0 and a (less measly) FireWire port. I have an external sea gate 3tb backup plus desktop hard drive that had a USB 3.0 cable. However, as stated earlier, my MBP only has a USB 2.0 port. But it seems the FireWire port might have better transfer rates. If I used a USB 3.0 to FireWire would it have greater transfer speeds, and by how much? If there is an even better way to connect my hard drive to my aforementioned MBP, please tell me. And if anybody has a good adapter recommendation, please tell me.

    There is no such thing as a USB-FireWire adapter/converter.  USB and FireWire are electrically and protocol incompatible.
    Seagate does make an accessory unit called the STAE 123 that works with the following drives to provide a FW800 interface:
    Backup Plus Desktop Drive for Mac V1
    Backup Plus Desktop Drive V1
    GoFlex Desk for Mac drive with Thunderbolt
    If your drive is one of those models, the STAE123 may be the answer to your needs.

  • SCSI to USB or FireWire cable/adapter

    i have an old LaCie 4GB external hard drive i'd like to get some files from, however, i need to find a solution to getting the 25-pin SCSI port adapted to either USB or FireWire so that i can use my G5 to extract the files.
    anybody know of a reliable solution or product?

    Start here to adapt the 25 pin scsi to 50 pin
    http://www.mac-pro.com/s.nl/it.A/id.2331/.f?sc=2&category=127
    And then this looks like the scsi to usb cable
    http://www.usbgear.com/326605.html
    Good luck!

  • Usb or firewire to dvi adapter

    Hello,
    I have a Macbook Pro without a DVI port (or any dedicated display port) and an extrenal monitor that connects by DVI. I googled usb to dvi adapter and found some for sale, but reviews talked about flickering monitor etc. I'm wondering if anyone has any experience with these? Can you recommend a brand? Is firewire better?
    Thanks for any feedback

    That is an old one. Not really familiar with it, here is Apple's manual for it http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/CinemaDisplays_20_23_30inchUserGuide.pdf
    in case you don;t have one.
    Not sure you need the USB and FireWire plugged in for the display to work as a display, I think they were there so that you could use the USB and FireWire ports on the display to plug in other devices to the  system, kind of like a hub.
    As for the DVI cable didn;t one come with the display?  You'd need some way to go from DVI to mini-dvi to connect to the MBP. There  will also be issues with the graphic card in the MBP, if it has the capability to drive the monitor.
    Sorry I can't be of more help,
    good luck
    regards

  • USB or Firewire to MIDI adapter

    I just bought an IMac and am looking for a USB or Firewire to MIDI adapter, couldn't find one in the Apple Store. COuld anyone recommend one? If they make them with multipe MIDI inputs that would be great.
    Thanks

    I just bought an IMac and am looking for a USB or
    Firewire to MIDI adapter, couldn't find one in the
    Apple Store. COuld anyone recommend one? If they make
    them with multipe MIDI inputs that would be great.
    Hi, Sashasdad. Lots of great adapters out there; which one is best for you depends on your circumstances.
    First suggestion: I would suggest going with one that has enough ins/outs plus one or two spares. If you get more gear, you can always add on another MIDI interface and your Mac shouldn't have any trouble handling it.
    Second suggestion: don't even look for a Firewire MIDI interface. You'll find audio interfaces with some MIDI ports that run on Firewire, but for straight MIDI data a USB port is going to handle a ton of I/O before it even thinks about breaking a sweat. (MIDI runs at 32 KILObits per second, while even pokey old USB 1.0 theoretically runs at 10 MEGAbits per second.)
    I've used the M-Audio MIDISport interfaces (2 in; 2 out) as well as "micro lite" from Mark of The Unicorn (MoTU). Both are absolutely easy to install and use. One small benefit of the MIDISport series is that there's a switch that allows you to use the device as a 'thru' box even if the computer isn't running or processing MIDI -- this is useful when you have a controller addressing one or two modules and you don't want to turn on your computer just to play around. The MoTU Ultra Lite is a 5*5 device, and it's served perfectly well for a few years now. Because my configuration has changed, I don't miss the 'thru' feature of the MIDISport interfaces.
    I would suggest checking online prices at M-Audio, Sweetwater Sound, and Musician's Friend -- then go to your local shop and expect a decent markup.
    Cheers,
    Michael
    WARNING: OLD FOGEY ALERT!!: Just to show my age here, I sorely miss the Opcode Studio-4 that I used to have: 8*8, with tons of patching and processing available in the box. Couple that with a Roland A-880 MIDI patchbay (also 8*8) and you've got oodles of power. Then there was the funny little Akai ME-25S and the wildly potent Yamaha MEP-4. Yummy, yummy, yummy.
    Back in the early 90s, I spent a huge amount of time with UltraMIDI and TweakIt on the wonderful Atari ST, at one point designing a pretty nifty two-player, four-controller, eight-module setup for a recital at Berklee.
    For what it's worth, you can do a whole lot more with much less money using today's gear (put Cycling 74's Max onto a cheap laptop and !!!!!), but there was a certain beautiful adventurousness to those weird old devices. The MEP-4 was particularly nifty. Mine is probably still working in my brother's home studio years away and far ago. And UltraMIDI was a variant on Max -- anything could be mapped to anything else!
    eMac 800mHz, MacBook 2gHz   Mac OS X (10.4.7)  

  • My ipod won't charge with USB or AC adapter - only Firewire

    I recently bought a 3rd gen 20 gig ipod of ebay and it won't charge through USB or AC adapter. When I charge it through firewire, it loses its charge fast, so I am assuming the battery is dead. This still doesn't explain why it won't charge through USB or AC. Does anyone know why this might be? Please help!

    good to know that 3G ipods don't charge through usb - but I still don't understand why an AC adapter wouldn't work. I can't even figure out the charging patern - it seems that when I plug it in through USB it drains the battery, but the battery life varies. One minute it will have full charge, then the next it will turn off and say it is empty, then the next it will have half life, all without plugging it in. Frustrating...

  • 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?

  • 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

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