954,341 Members — Technology Publication meets Social Media
Username:
Password:
Lost login information?
Have something to say? Contribute New Article Reply to this Article

CD-ROM's connection

I don't know a thing about what those pins at the back of CD-ROM drive do.

Just out of curiosity:

Is there some combination of pins that gives (for example) "PLAY" function or "EJECT", etc.

In other words: if you would have an autonomus power suplly exact to requirements for CD-ROM drive, would it be possible to have a simple interface with buttons connected to some pins on CD-ROM to controle it's functions?

Can it work autonomuslly at all?!?

Maybe there is some other way to controle it's functioning?

SAZAR
Junior Poster in Training
86 posts since Sep 2004
Reputation Points: 10
Solved Threads: 0
 

Which pins? There are usually:

1. The IDE data cable connector.
2. Power.
3. Jumper pins to set slave/master/cable select (if you have 2 drives on the one cable/IDE channel).
4. Analog CD audio out (connect to your sound card).
5. Digital CD audio out (as above).

You can control your CD-ROM drive's function quite easily from within Windows! Just right click the drive in My Computer or Explorer.

Coconut Monkey
Inside your PC
Team Colleague
631 posts since May 2004
Reputation Points: 51
Solved Threads: 13
 

I think he is wanting a stand alone player...

I have seen some that have additional buttons on the front for play stop etc. and it would work as a stand alone, but I dont know of any way to jumper the data lines to trigger a play event etc..

Thong_Ispector
Practically a Master Poster
638 posts since Nov 2004
Reputation Points: 16
Solved Threads: 19
 

Which pins? There are usually:

1. The IDE data cable connector. 2. Power. 3. Jumper pins to set slave/master/cable select (if you have 2 drives on the one cable/IDE channel). 4. Analog CD audio out (connect to your sound card). 5. Digital CD audio out (as above).

You can control your CD-ROM drive's function quite easily from within Windows! Just right click the drive in My Computer or Explorer.

No, no, no, no. You missinterpretted. I DON'T KNOW WHAT IDE PINS DO, I know what plugs are used for what at the back of CD-ROM drive.

Like the guy below said - I want to make it work autonomously.
(I have an old, used-up, reading-laser-head-went-almost-dead, CD-ROM which I "use as a paper-weight" right now, so I don't really care even if I screw things up completely)

Just for the sake of techtalk...

SAZAR
Junior Poster in Training
86 posts since Sep 2004
Reputation Points: 10
Solved Threads: 0
 

Come on! Someone! Please answer!

SAZAR
Junior Poster in Training
86 posts since Sep 2004
Reputation Points: 10
Solved Threads: 0
 

I was under the impression that the IDE pins are purely for data transfer - I don't think there's a specific pin or two designed especially for eject/play commands. Still, I might be wrong. I suggest you perform some heavy googling and look up IDE specifications or something along that line.

Coconut Monkey
Inside your PC
Team Colleague
631 posts since May 2004
Reputation Points: 51
Solved Threads: 13
 

This article has been dead for over three months

Post: Markdown Syntax: Formatting Help
You