Reply 1 of 7, by Auzner
It's cheap and simple enough--I vote cut that one you linked. Order 2 and cut one down with a spare do-over. Tin snips, dremel, hack saw, jig saw would all work.
Reply 2 of 7, by yawetaG
Does an adapter need to be described as "bootable" to actually be bootable? I don't see much difference between the prints of the ones that have "bootable" in the description and the ones that have not...
Reply 3 of 7, by Auzner
No. CF uses the ATA standard. These are passive boards with no circuits but just mechanical pin adapters.
Reply 4 of 7, by yawetaG
Good. Guess I'll order an adapter then. 😀
Reply 5 of 7, by yawetaG
Received the adapter, on first thought I don't think I will be able to fit it into a low-profile slot after cutting down the slot bracket. The print for the adapter itself seems too wide. However, it looks like there's no traces in the edges of the print, so maybe I can cut down the print itself. Edit: Confirmed not to fit. The CF adapter's print is simply too wide to fit between the motherboard and the top of the low profile case. So I'll try option #2:
And if that turns out not to be possible, I think it's probably possible to remove the bracket entirely and mount the adapter directly to the case...
On another note, a thin padded envelope is not suited for shipping three of these things halfway around the world (the brackets are bent). 😐
Reply 6 of 7, by Auzner
Dremel the PCB and try this? Or still too tall for low profile?
Otherwise, yes, a panel mount or something with the four PCB mounts.
Reply 7 of 7, by yawetaG
That would have worked if there had been no components on the motherboard near the bracket slot I wanted to use. Unfortunately there are components, although there's no actual PCI slot present.