Modular PSU Cables Are Not Interchangeable: A Common Cause of Drive Death

Modular power supply cables from different manufacturers or even different models from the same brand are not interchangeable despite physically fitting. The device-side connector is standardized (SATA), but the PSU-side pinout is not — mixing cables can reverse polarity or apply wrong voltages, instantly destroying hard drives and SSDs.

The single most common cause of hard drive electrical failure in enthusiast and data-hoarding communities is using modular PSU (power supply unit) cables from the wrong power supply. ## Why the Cables Aren't Interchangeable The SATA power connector on the device side (the end that plugs into your drive) is standardized across all manufacturers. However, the PSU-side connector — the end that plugs into your modular power supply — has **no industry standard pinout**. Different PSU brands, and often different models within the same brand, use completely different pin assignments on the modular side. This means a cable that physically fits your PSU may route 12V where 5V should go, reverse polarity entirely, or create a short circuit. The connector fits, but the wiring is wrong. ## The Damage When wrong voltages reach the drive through a mismatched cable, the TVS diodes on the drive's PCB may absorb the hit (blowing the fuse and making the drive appear dead but recoverable — see HDD PCB Electrical Failure: TVS Diodes, Fuses, and DIY Repair). In worse cases, the overvoltage passes through to the motor controller, preamp chip, or the drive's internal electronics, causing unrecoverable damage. A single wrong cable can destroy every drive on the chain simultaneously. There are documented cases of users losing entire drive arrays — 10+ drives — from one cable swap. ## The Rule **Only use the modular cables that came bundled with your specific PSU model.** When in doubt, consult the manufacturer's cable compatibility chart. Label your cables when you buy a PSU. Never keep loose modular cables in a shared parts bin without labels. This applies equally to SATA drives, NVMe adapters with SATA power, and optical drives.

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