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Looks like buffered IDE signals (bus transceivers on a small add-on PCB at the IDE connector?) are needed for anything that don't fit on the EFIKA board. This would help to satisfy SI stub length and electrical spec.
Such hardware doesn't exist, and really, I don't think it is worth the time or engineering effort to even make it.
We had a project submission for a buffered IDE port on the Efika, from someone who had made Amiga buffered IDE ports before (wait, was this you?). I couldn't get a decent answer from bplan on whether it was even possible, and the rumble from that side of the company was that it would probably be more complex than it sounds.
So, just make do with it. I cannot imagine what you want to do with an Efika given it's specifications that would require so much hardware on an ATA bus.
I'd have liked to have had hard drive and CDROM both. OR I'd like to move the drive location in the case and do a 3.5" IDE drive adaption. OR I'd like to do a CompactFlash adaptor with buffered IDE to cable to a hard drive or CD. If that's beyond what Efika is meant for, well, then I want to do something Efika wasn't meant for. I'm not interested in whether you think it makes sense or not, it makes sense to me. Hardware ingenuity is part of what attracted me to the Amiga back in the day, and I'd like to continue hacking. I'm trying to figure out what to use my Efika for, and either I get to do what I want with the IDE port or it'll be a boring print server.
Serious question, how do I learn more about Efika's IDE limitations to work on a buffer gadget or two?