| Standing screen display size | 3.5 Inches |
|---|---|
| Hard Drive | External |
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Kingwin Performance Single Bay Hot Swap Mobile Rack For 3.5” SSD/HDD, Internal Tray-Less SATA Hard Drive Backplane Enclosure, Support SATA I/II/III & SAS I/II 6Gbps and [Optimized for 3.5” SSD/HDD]
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| Brand | Kingwin |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5.75 x 7.17 x 1.65 inches |
| Material | Metal |
| Assembly Required | Yes |
About this item
- Make sure this fits by entering your model number.
- ✔️ Led Indicator - LED light for power and HDD activity
- ✔️ Simplicity - Easy open latch door, No inner tray required, and Tool-less design for HDD installation
- ✔️ Safety - metal key lock and 1.0 mm guide wire for slim HDD
- ✔️ Convenient - Driver-free support and Supports hot swap
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Kingwin Performance Single Bay Hot Swap Mobile Rack For 3.5" SSD/HDD
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This item Kingwin Performance Single Bay Hot Swap Mobile Rack For 3.5” SSD/HDD, Internal Tray-Less SATA Hard Drive Backplane Enclosure, Support SATA I/II/III & SAS I/II 6Gbps and [Optimized for 3.5” SSD/HDD] | StarTech.com 5.25" to 3.5" Trayless Hard Drive Hot Swap Bay - Removable Hard Drive Bay for 3.5" SATA/SAS Drives - Aluminum (HSB1SATSASBA) | StarTech.com 3-Bay Hot Swap Backplane for 3.5in SAS II/SATA III - 6 Gbps HDD - Aluminum Trayless Mobile Rack Backplane (HSB3SATSASBA) | StarTech.com 4-Bay Mobile Rack Backplane - Trayless Hot Swap Mobile Rack Backplane for 3.5in SAS II/SATA III - 6 Gbps HDD (HSB4SATSASBA) | Corsair Dual SSD Mounting Bracket (3.5” Internal Drive Bay to 2.5", Easy Installation) Black | SABRENT 75 in 1 Multi Flash Media Card Reader/Writer(with Power Cord) (CRW-UINB) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Customer Rating | 4.1 out of 5 stars (1716) | 4.5 out of 5 stars (136) | 4.4 out of 5 stars (102) | 4.0 out of 5 stars (88) | 4.7 out of 5 stars (24009) | 4.2 out of 5 stars (3870) |
| Price | $19.99$19.99 | $34.93$34.93 | $84.34$84.34 | $112.55$112.55 | $6.99$6.99 | $7.98$7.98 |
| Sold By | KWI-Kingwin | Amazon.com | PCNation | Amazon.com | Amazon.com | Store4PC |
| Are batteries required? | No | — | No | No | — | No |
| Computer Memory Size | 0 GB | — | 0 TB | 0 GB | — | — |
| Item Dimensions | 5.75 x 7.17 x 1.65 inches | 7.06 x 5.75 x 1.65 inches | 7.64 x 5.75 x 3.35 inches | 7.76 x 5.75 x 4.96 inches | 5.7 x 3.97 x 0.9 inches | 5.12 x 5.91 x 1.18 inches |
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Product information
Technical Details
| Brand | Kingwin |
|---|---|
| Item model number | KF-1000-BK |
| Hardware Platform | Sata |
| Item Weight | 13.2 ounces |
| Product Dimensions | 5.75 x 7.17 x 1.65 inches |
| Item Dimensions LxWxH | 5.75 x 7.17 x 1.65 inches |
| Manufacturer | KingWin |
| ASIN | B00126U0VA |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Date First Available | January 4, 2008 |
Additional Information
| Customer Reviews |
4.1 out of 5 stars |
|---|---|
| Best Sellers Rank | #366 in Enclosures |
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From the manufacturer
Professional Grade
KF-1000-BK is an internal 3.5” SATA drive enclosure that fits easily into any 5.25” half-height front bay slot of your server desktop or PC case. This hot-swap mobile rack has a tool-free, screwless design which make the swapping of your HDD quick and easy. We value our customer’s data and understand the importance of security of keeping your data safe, that’s why all KF-1000-BK has a built-in key lock to prevent other people from accessing your drive. With convenient user experience and utmost performance, our mobile rack will be the leading solution for your storage needs.
Hot-Swappable Design
We gave you the convenience of instantly removing and inserting your drive, with the easy-open latch front door you will have immediate access to swap out HDD. Not only you get to manage your drive more efficiently, but also makes it easy for maintenance and upgrades.
FEATURES
- 3.5” Internal SATA Drive Enclosure
- Supports all 3.5” SATA I/II/III Drives (depends on PC motherboard)
- Compatible with SATA Version I / II / III (1.5/3.0/6.0 Gbps) SSD
- Fits into 5.25” front bay of most PC casing
- Supports SATA drive hot-swap
- Power and HDD Access LED indicators
- 1.0mm guide wire for slim HDD
- Easy open latch door with safety key lock
- Patent NSS (Non-Scratch SATA connector)
Product Description
The KF-1000-BK is an internal 3.5" SATA drive mobile rack enclosure that fits easily into the 5.25" half-height front bay slot of most desktop or server PC. This slick tray-less enclosure allows SATA drive hot-swap and includes a front cover door, air vents, Power and HDD access LED indicators, and key lock protection for securing your hard drive. The KF-1000-BK design is light, durable and easy to assemble. This enclosure uses patented Non-Scratch SATA (NSS) connector to prevent your hard drive connector from damaging and is tested with an insertion rate up to 50,000 times. Special silicon rubber anti-shock system is built on each side of the rack to provide added hard drive shock absorption and noise reduction. The KF-1000-BK also lets you to easily install or remove the hard drive without any tools for fast and easy hot swapping. The tray-less design also provides effective hard drive heat dissipation.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonReviewed in the United States on February 23, 2022
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Top reviews from the United States
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Unfortunately, it seems like the drive bay market doesn't have any "clear" winners these days. After a lengthy search, these Kingwin's appeared to be about as "premium" as one can get these days. I pulled the trigger on three of these Kingpin's to fully replace my finely aged Norco's. I planned to replace the fan immediately as I know these units always come with loud, obnoxious and typically poorly performing fans.
I read over the specs and I knew these units came with an odd sized 80x80x15mm fan. I thought, "How dumb would you have to be to not support the most common fan in the world, 80x80x25mm? Well, I'll kill the suspense. These are THAT dumb. You can make it work, but definitely not well. To get my Noctua NF-A8 FLX 3 PIN fans sufficiently secured, I could not install the drive bay's fan protector over the fan with the supplied screws. A longer screw by just 1mm would have done it. So, now my fans are just sitting out there, waiting to eat a SAS cable one of these days. The whole fan mount is odd, too, I can easily think of very minor design tweaks that would have greatly improved the fan installation. Had I known the fans would be exposed, I definitely would have selected one of Noctua's "prettier" fans.
But wait, it gets worse. The drive bay's fan connector of course doesn't use the industry standard 3-pin Dupont style connector like you'd see in every 3rd party case fan sold today. No, it uses the micro-style Dupont connector, the likes you would see on enterprise network or server hardware and ultra compact equipment. The 3-pin Dupont connector has been around in PC's since the 1980's, at least! Maybe there are adapters, who knows? Frankly, there's only so much I'm willing to put into a poor design choices to "make it right." I just brought the fan connectors back to my motherboard through some PWM fan splitters. It's a hack job, but it works I guess.
I just find it hard to believe such a disregard for common standards can still be a thing in 2022. I expected this kind of thing ten years ago, not these days. Even my decade plus old drive bays were built properly, so there's just no excuse.
Enough of the complaints. The drive bays are actually quite nice. They are made from metal and are attractive for the most part. I went from a tray design to trayless, which I was a bit hesitant about. Turns out, trayless is pretty sweet. I had no problems with fitting the 4-in-3 into my case, it slid right into the rails. I also liked that these new bays shaved off probably 2 inches of depth compared to my Norco bays, which gave my motherboard's rear facing SATA ports a bit more berth. If you don't like the rather bright LED's on the individual bays, a switch can be set to turn them off. I don't mind them (for now, subject to change) and I really like that they indicate drive usage - a missing feature on my Norco's.
I had no technical troubles to speak of, which is decidedly a win. (Though I did have to mod my case with a Dremel to fit three drive bays on my original build 11 years ago.) All 12 drive bays were immediately responsive, negotiating at 6gbps SATAIII. I run a mix of 16TB and 8TB Seagate hard drives at this time, though I'd be surprised to see a drive bay be incompatible with drive sizes. It's really more about cooling ability and the means of staying within drive specifications. Possibly a silver lining to the fan issues described above, the motherboard's PWM control of the fans does make for a slightly quieter operation most of the time.
Probably most important, cooling capability. One of the very first things I did was run a parity check, which rips all 12 drives at full speed for around 16 hours. It's a serious stress test and will push drive bays to their limit. My Norco cases would peak at 115F with ambient air in the mid-to-high 60's, hot but still within my drive specifications. The Kingwin's perform pretty much identically, probably on account of using the same fan. This offers me a bit of breathing room for higher ambient temperatures, since my drive's peak operating temperature is 149F. I'd be concerned if I ever saw indoor ambient air temperatures above 100F, though.
So, what's the final verdict? Assuming no troubles come my way, and I'll update if I do have them - I do recommend these Kingwin 4-in-3 drive bays. They're probably about as good as it'll get at this time. I'm frustrated by the fan issues, but I won't see it because my server isn't some RGB freak show in a glass case. If I were doing a higher end build, I'd probably spend the effort to find the right screws. I'd also terminate my own Dupont fan adapter, but I'm way too unmotivated to do it for a utilitarian server build. I'm hoping this will be a good storage foundation for another 10+ years.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on February 23, 2022
Unfortunately, it seems like the drive bay market doesn't have any "clear" winners these days. After a lengthy search, these Kingwin's appeared to be about as "premium" as one can get these days. I pulled the trigger on three of these Kingpin's to fully replace my finely aged Norco's. I planned to replace the fan immediately as I know these units always come with loud, obnoxious and typically poorly performing fans.
I read over the specs and I knew these units came with an odd sized 80x80x15mm fan. I thought, "How dumb would you have to be to not support the most common fan in the world, 80x80x25mm? Well, I'll kill the suspense. These are THAT dumb. You can make it work, but definitely not well. To get my Noctua NF-A8 FLX 3 PIN fans sufficiently secured, I could not install the drive bay's fan protector over the fan with the supplied screws. A longer screw by just 1mm would have done it. So, now my fans are just sitting out there, waiting to eat a SAS cable one of these days. The whole fan mount is odd, too, I can easily think of very minor design tweaks that would have greatly improved the fan installation. Had I known the fans would be exposed, I definitely would have selected one of Noctua's "prettier" fans.
But wait, it gets worse. The drive bay's fan connector of course doesn't use the industry standard 3-pin Dupont style connector like you'd see in every 3rd party case fan sold today. No, it uses the micro-style Dupont connector, the likes you would see on enterprise network or server hardware and ultra compact equipment. The 3-pin Dupont connector has been around in PC's since the 1980's, at least! Maybe there are adapters, who knows? Frankly, there's only so much I'm willing to put into a poor design choices to "make it right." I just brought the fan connectors back to my motherboard through some PWM fan splitters. It's a hack job, but it works I guess.
I just find it hard to believe such a disregard for common standards can still be a thing in 2022. I expected this kind of thing ten years ago, not these days. Even my decade plus old drive bays were built properly, so there's just no excuse.
Enough of the complaints. The drive bays are actually quite nice. They are made from metal and are attractive for the most part. I went from a tray design to trayless, which I was a bit hesitant about. Turns out, trayless is pretty sweet. I had no problems with fitting the 4-in-3 into my case, it slid right into the rails. I also liked that these new bays shaved off probably 2 inches of depth compared to my Norco bays, which gave my motherboard's rear facing SATA ports a bit more berth. If you don't like the rather bright LED's on the individual bays, a switch can be set to turn them off. I don't mind them (for now, subject to change) and I really like that they indicate drive usage - a missing feature on my Norco's.
I had no technical troubles to speak of, which is decidedly a win. (Though I did have to mod my case with a Dremel to fit three drive bays on my original build 11 years ago.) All 12 drive bays were immediately responsive, negotiating at 6gbps SATAIII. I run a mix of 16TB and 8TB Seagate hard drives at this time, though I'd be surprised to see a drive bay be incompatible with drive sizes. It's really more about cooling ability and the means of staying within drive specifications. Possibly a silver lining to the fan issues described above, the motherboard's PWM control of the fans does make for a slightly quieter operation most of the time.
Probably most important, cooling capability. One of the very first things I did was run a parity check, which rips all 12 drives at full speed for around 16 hours. It's a serious stress test and will push drive bays to their limit. My Norco cases would peak at 115F with ambient air in the mid-to-high 60's, hot but still within my drive specifications. The Kingwin's perform pretty much identically, probably on account of using the same fan. This offers me a bit of breathing room for higher ambient temperatures, since my drive's peak operating temperature is 149F. I'd be concerned if I ever saw indoor ambient air temperatures above 100F, though.
So, what's the final verdict? Assuming no troubles come my way, and I'll update if I do have them - I do recommend these Kingwin 4-in-3 drive bays. They're probably about as good as it'll get at this time. I'm frustrated by the fan issues, but I won't see it because my server isn't some RGB freak show in a glass case. If I were doing a higher end build, I'd probably spend the effort to find the right screws. I'd also terminate my own Dupont fan adapter, but I'm way too unmotivated to do it for a utilitarian server build. I'm hoping this will be a good storage foundation for another 10+ years.
Yes, the 80mmx20mm fan that comes with this unit is loud and annoying. What I did to change this, was buy a Noctua NF-A8 FLX 80mm x 25mm fan, a Mini Micro Jst 2.0 Ph 3 Pin Connector, a Female 3-Pin PC Fan Connector and a male 3-Pin PC Fan Connector. I cut the fans connector and made it a shorter length, added a 3 pin female connector, then took a Mini Micro Jst 2.0 Ph 3 Pin Connector, shortened the length and put a 3 Pin male connector on the opposite end, connected it all together and wala you have what is in the pic. Its clean and easy to switch out the fan if need be in the future. Most importantly, the fan is dead silent now. You will also need a crimper tool to do this project. everything can be found here on amazon.
Hope this helps out future buyers. The product itself is great and does what its suppose to do, hot swap 5 drives, the stock fan is the only con to this product.
Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on January 17, 2023
Yes, the 80mmx20mm fan that comes with this unit is loud and annoying. What I did to change this, was buy a Noctua NF-A8 FLX 80mm x 25mm fan, a Mini Micro Jst 2.0 Ph 3 Pin Connector, a Female 3-Pin PC Fan Connector and a male 3-Pin PC Fan Connector. I cut the fans connector and made it a shorter length, added a 3 pin female connector, then took a Mini Micro Jst 2.0 Ph 3 Pin Connector, shortened the length and put a 3 Pin male connector on the opposite end, connected it all together and wala you have what is in the pic. Its clean and easy to switch out the fan if need be in the future. Most importantly, the fan is dead silent now. You will also need a crimper tool to do this project. everything can be found here on amazon.
Hope this helps out future buyers. The product itself is great and does what its suppose to do, hot swap 5 drives, the stock fan is the only con to this product.
Top reviews from other countries
Fitting was fairly easy, but beware that some cases have easy-fit latches on the sides of the 5.25inch bays and this will not be compatible with such latches, so you'll have to pull those off first, which in my case left only one set of holes on each side to attach this item (couldn't attach the rear two holes with screws) but with just the front two it was still quite firmly enough attached).
I am pleased with the device, it seems sturdy and well made and is fast without the issues of high resource usage or slow disconnects you get with the Usb variants. Great that it has a power button too.
The only negative: in the description you see the word "hot swap" - note that this is NOT hot swap in the true sense of the word. While you can remove one HDD from it while the PC is still in Windows, when you plug in the 2nd HDD you can't access it until you have done a reboot of the PC. Also if you boot up the PC with no HDD in the slot, on my setup I found that I can't then plug in an HDD after I've booted into it windows as it simply won't find it until rebooting with the drive inserted upon startup. This really sux!
I use the latest top of the range PC with Windows 10 v1809. All drivers fully updates.
this must be powered up and have a hdd/ssd in it
to change hdd/ssd, power off replace hdd/ssd and power on
it will then function okay
The dock connects to a standard SATA power connector and a SATA port on the computer motherboard. Here is where things get complicated, because the standard SATA ports on motherboards are not by design hot-swappable. There may be some motherboards where the CMOS ('BIOS') does permit designating a specific SATA port as hot-swappable but I don't think any of my computers have that option. The hard drives (or SSDs) that are inserted into any dock should be regarded and handled in the same way was you handle USB thumb drives, media cards, portable USB hard drives or external US drives (self powered) such that after you have read and especially written files to and from them you must properly eject (unmount) the devices before disconnecting them, otherwise you will, sooner or later, get file corruption and often actual disk corruption that may be only correctable by reformatting the hard drive. Users of linux, at least experienced users like myself, already know how to mount and cleanly unmount devices, even drives in docks connected through SATA ports. But for Windows the standard procedure, for example in Windows 7, is to go to the icon in the task bar in the lower right and click on the 'safely eject and remove media' icon, then click on the device (in this case the drive in the dock) you wish to eject. Drives inserted in this KF-255-BK dock will not appear in that list and so the only safe way to remove the drive is to either shutdown the computer (and then turn the power off to the dock and remove the drive) or reboot the computer and at restart turn off the dock power and remove the drive. There are free utilities for Windows that are supposed to solve the problem of safely ejecting drives in SATA connected docks. You may also have luck with some command line instructions in a DOS/Command shell/terminal.


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