SGodfrey
Thanks Guys,
Lots of useful tips there. Firstly, the idea was to avoid buying the sata usb cable by putting the ssd straight into the caddy and into the optical drive, clone the main hard drive, then swap them over. Then I'd have the SSD as my main drive and I could reformat the old drive (now in the caddy) at my leisure. However, enough of the cheapskate, I've bitten the bullet and mail ordered the sata cable.
I thought about the suggestion of swapping the blank ssd for the hard drive as suggested abacab, but I don't have enough confidence about using the bios and the other problem is lack of time. I was a bit concerned about your other point that the SSD needs power as well as the port connector. The caddy has just one connector and so does the SSD (Crucial MX300 750GB).
Thanks again for your feedback, I will await the cable and let's see what happens.
My description of the SATA SSD connectors was based on placing a SSD in my tower PC case using the conventional separate data and power cables, rather than a caddy.
The optical drive bay caddy should present the necessary SATA connector pins for data and power to the SATA drive.
When I bought an external USB enclosure for a SATA 3.5" HDD, the internal connector (probably similar to your caddy) was a unified type bracket that had pins for the data and power connectors on the drive to plug into. Check that these are attached securely. Try re-seating the drive.
It's also possible that something isn't making contact in this arrangement, so some process of elimination becomes necessary. After you finish cloning the HDD and swapping the drives, you can try the HDD in the caddy . That should tell you if the caddy is functional. You already know the HDD is good