Question Are there any reliable right-angle adapters/cables for SATA power ports?

Cyber_Akuma

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I have multiple SATA drives that my case angles right against it's back side-panel, this means that the cables are mashing against the panel and I am very worried it can bend/fray the cables or crack/break the SATA connectors on the drives. So I got right-angled cables for my drives. Issue is though, I was only able to find cables for the DATA connection of my drives, not the power. For some reason all sorts of cables and adapters to connect the data cable of your drives at a right angle are available, but not power. (What's the point then? Wouldn't you need BOTH to be right-angle if one of them is?)

I mean, I was able to find some very shoddy stuff. Adapters that split a single SATA power cable into two like this: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07C2TJ82P/

Or ones that use molex instead like this: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07DJ654GN

Or terrifyingly, one that splits a single SATA connector into FIVE like this: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09P4RQSNS

I am pretty sure the ones that split the cables are likely going to pull too much current, especially since I am going to be connecting these to 7200 RPM 3.5 HDDs for a RAID setup, it's not like I am using low-power SSDs or something.

On top of that, all of those and the one example of a right-angle cable I could find all looked like they used the cheap molded cable manufacturing method, which apparently is a fire hazard, especially for what I am going to be using them for:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYkof-csPfI


Is there ANY type of reliable right-angle connector for SATA power? There are literally thousands of of right-angle connectors of all types for the data port, but bizarrely almost nothing for the power port, and the few I could find all look like potential fire hazards. Since I am going to have five HDDs in my RAID setup that will be on 24/7 I don't want to risk using random cheap cables that can risk a fire.
 
What you need are inline SATA power connectors, commonly used to custom-make cables as you can install them wherever you like along your existing cables (and many PSUs come with this type stock). Here is what a genuine Molex branded 067926 looks like:
SATA_Power_IDT_Receptacle_smi.jpg
0679260002.jpg

A flat cap covers the wires on the back so it's very low-profile (note there are pass-thru caps, as well as end caps for covering cut wire ends on the last in a chain)

Your "terrifying" cable is actually made of knockoffs of these, so (as the video shows) can actually be disassembled then installed onto your own PSU's wires wherever you want them. Just take care not to wire them backwards.

There is less than 1mm of plastic between power and ground on the drive side which is why badly made SATA connectors of any type are a fire hazard. You can see if the pins wiggle as the wires are moved around, but it's way harder to check if the plastic used is low quality. Having five drives on a single chain isn't a fire hazard as they only run at ~10w each, though they can draw 3x this at spin-up which is why a SAS controller generally staggers the startups on power-on (if voltage drops too low some of the drives may not spin-up in time and the controller may think they've failed, but it's still not a fire hazard as it's so momentary)
 
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Cyber_Akuma

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The cable isn't made out of those, as I said, it's just molded. You can see the wires touching on the inside because they are basically just encased in rubber/plastic, not actually separated and spaced like in that connector you showed.

Where does one get all the wiring and parts for something like this? I would not be able to connect something like that directly into my modular PSU, I would likely have to use Molex to SATA or something.