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#46 | ||||||||
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Join Date: Mar 2012
Posts: 764
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#47 | ||||||||
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Too much caffeine
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts: 106
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As far I can see there are two causes of the problem:
There is some kind of conflict between my Plextor CD-Rom drives and the rest. Probably a dodgy terminator. I lack terminator power. And I think this is the real culprit. My two HD's have SCSI-ID 0 and 1. I have set the ID for the CD-drive to 2, turned on parity, turned of termination. See the attached photo for a detailed layout of the jumpers. Both drives (I have tried them individually) show the same error. When I try to boot my drives dosn't spin up and I go directly to the Kickstart 3.1 bootmenu. The Seagate HD (wich has ID 0 and is first in the chain) has a jumper for termination power. At the moment it is off. The IBM HD (which has ID 1 and is the second in the chain) dos not have the ability to supply termination power. Only the 68SE model has that and mine is not that. It connects through a rather strange interface. Se photo. Can I enable termination power on the first drive (Seagate) without risking to cause damage? Or do I have to move it to the last place before the terminator? If I do not move it the chain would then be: Active terminator CSPPC Seagate HD (with termination power enabled) IBM HD CD-ROM Active terminator Thank you in advance.
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#48 | ||||||||
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Kindred of Babble-on
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The pic on the right is an SCA adapter. SCA is an interface intended for connecting into a backplane, there's no termination or termpower provided (there are some SCA adapters with terminators but this isn't one).
Termpower is often provided by several devices but I've had - rare - occasions when that was a problem somehow (which I can't explain I'm afraid). Best practice is to provide termpower by the host adapter and if that isn't possible from the devices at the end of the bus, near the terminators. Terminators with an LED have the advantage of showing you whether termpower's present. SCSI IDs: the RDB 'last drive' option just stops scanning further drives for RDB automount purposes, so it's perfectly reasonable to put an optical drive on higher IDs. I'm running my boot drive on ID1, so I can add a temporary drive at ID0 without having to fiddle with HDToolBox. Opticals (if present) are on 4 & 5, a tape on 3. 6 I reserve for a 2nd host adapter (PC side) but I haven't 'SCSI-netted' for ages. |
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#49 | |||||||||
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Defender of the Faith
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 1,133
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Quote:
Passive terminators are a bunch of resistors from the bus lines to term power. Active terminators are similar, but as well as pull up resistors they have voltage regulators. Wikipedia has a bit more detail Parallel SCSI buses must always be terminated at both ends to ensure reliable operation. Without termination, data transitions would reflect back from the ends of the bus causing pulse distortion and potential data loss. A positive DC termination voltage is provided by one or more devices on the bus, typically the initiator(s). This positive voltage is called TERMPOWER and is usually around +4.3 volts. TERMPOWER is normally generated by a diode connection to +5.0 volts. This is called a diode-OR circuit, designed to prevent backflow of current to the supplying device. A device that supplies TERMPOWER must be able to provide up to 900 mA (single-ended SCSI) or 600 mA (differential SCSI). Some early disk drives included internal terminators, but most modern disk-drives do not provide termination which is then deemed to be external. Termination can be passive or active. Passive termination means that each signal line is terminated by two resistors, 220 Ω to TERMPOWER and 330 Ω to ground. Active termination means that there is a small voltage regulator which provides a +3.3 V supply. Each signal line is then terminated by a 110 Ω resistor to the +3.3 V supply. Active termination provides a better impedance match than passive termination because most flat ribbon cables have a characteristic impedance of approximately 110 Ω. Forced perfect termination (FPT) is similar to active termination, but with added diode clamp circuits which absorb any residual voltage overshoot or undershoot. No term power, no termination. I doubt you can cause damage from enabling term power on any of the devices, no matter where they are on the bus. The only problem I could imagine would be a voltage drop, but the regulator in an active terminator will sort that out. Last edited by psxphill; 10-07-2012 at 07:31 AM.. |
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#50 | ||||||||
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Too much caffeine
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts: 106
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Well I moved the HD's so that the chain is as follows:
Active terminator CSPPC IBM ID0 - no term power Seagate ID1 - term power CD-ROM ID2 - no term power Active terminator When I have that chain I still go to the kickstart 3.1 boot menu. When I remove the CD-ROM it boots into OS4.1 fine (placed on the IBM). I most admit I am loosing hope here. Once during my fideling around I got the CD to work. Then I put all hardware in its places and changed som ID jumpers and then it didn't work again. Do not know why? :-( I have an old IDE DVD-drive laying around. Can I use that on the IDE channel? I know it is not that fast but since I am will not be using it for anything but installation that would be just fine. SCSI kind a suck right now ....
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Booooiiiing!!!! |
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#51 | |||||||||
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Cult Member
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Quote:
i was saying they are 2 seperate things. some people comfuse term power as termination etc.Some people don't realize what term power was for. mech |
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#52 | |||||||||
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Cult Member
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Have you went into the csppc early menu and checked the scsi setting? perhaps something is off? You might set everything to auto until you get up and running. Maybe the cdrom drive is bad? 15-20 year old scsi drives do fail sometimes. You could use a cd/dvd drive on the internal ide with no problems. it will be slow,but as you say, something is better than nothing. Be sure to set it as master if its the only ide device. Mech |
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#53 | |||||||||||
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Too much caffeine
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts: 106
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Quote:
Quote:
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Great :-) I will dig one out and see what happends.
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Booooiiiing!!!! Last edited by JohnFante; 10-07-2012 at 12:55 PM.. |
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#54 | |||||||||
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Cult Member
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Quote:
I think i see the trouble, you should be using a 68 to 50 adapter with high byte termination. The picture you have seems to show a regular 68/50 adapter. Mech |
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#55 | ||||||||
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Kindred of Babble-on
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When a narrow device is connected somwhere in the middle you can simply use an ordinary adapter.
Only if you connect that device to an end and need it to provide termination (no cable terminator) then you need a half-terminating adapter to take care of the high byte.
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#56 | |||||||||
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Too much caffeine
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts: 106
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Quote:
Active terminator CSPPC IBM ID0 - no term power CD-ROM ID2 - no term power Seagate ID5 - term power Active terminator Stil the same. :-( Maybe my terminator is no good? It has no LED so I can not see if it has termination power. But when I remove it (and the CD-ROM) my system will not boot so it must be doing someting.
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Booooiiiing!!!! |
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#57 | ||||||||
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Too much caffeine
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts: 106
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Just a quick thought after I browsed for help.
Do the HD's have to be set for single ended? There is a jumper on both that can force single ended. At the moment they are off. The drives are a IBMDRHS-36D and a Seagate ST150176LW.
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Booooiiiing!!!! |
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#58 | ||||||||
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Kindred of Babble-on
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Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: finland
Posts: 2,129
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#59 | |||||||||
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Defender of the Faith
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Join Date: Aug 2009
Posts: 1,133
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Quote:
If you've still not got it sorted and you want to have them on the same bus then you will need to read up alot more on SCSI and do some trial an error adding and removing devices. |
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#60 | |||||||||
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Too much caffeine
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Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Copenhagen, Denmark
Posts: 106
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Quote:
I will se if forcing SE gives any result. If not then I will switch to a IDE CD-ROM and give my SCSI-problem a rest and read up on SCSI. I am a bit tired off moving drives and jumpers around .... :-)
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Booooiiiing!!!! |
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