Thanks everyone for help but I already sold the sampler. I just told him
about this situation but he still wanted it.
Dave
simonflinn(a)mac.com wrote:
Early scsi is a pain in the arse.
If you have old cables, well, you're not helping...or long cables, it
doesn't like long cables, or cheap ones for that matter, you get more
errors and slower transfers with cheap cables. Cheap AND old AND long,
well , you've got no chance!!
Make sure the drive isn't terminated internally with those little
resistor packs, ie open up the drive case and look at the bottom of
the drive for them. Try to use active terminators rather than passive,
they're better.
Two terminations are required, one at the start and one at the end, so
one at sampler and one on drive. Too much is no good as is too little.
Some samplers will require you to turn the term on in s/w. Some will
have two big scsi plugs, one should have a terminator in.
Two terminations are required, if you need only one then it's not
working correctly or there is one which you don't know about. More or
less terminations means that something is wrong. Did I say that twice....
Power drives first then hosts.
But like I say, early SCSI is a pain in the arse. 8 bit unbalanced
short distance slow transfer current loop.
Of course it could also be a drive that's not supported, you can't
just chuck any old drive on there you know...
Or you might have an ID clash, two devices wit the same ID, that's no
good. Change one. Like an S1000 on ID 5 with a drive on ID 5...
Does the sampler have an internal drive? That's probably terminated
with the little resistor packs. Remove the term on that if you're
hooking up an external drive, or turn
m/board term off in s/w. That might work.
On 15 May 2006, at 13:49, Dave wrote:
When termination is set to on, during the boot
process the Drive ID
check is bypassed and the s760 will boot.
It is bypassed and not recognized on the ID it is set for because it
is not showing up in the list of ID's from 1 to 7.
Dave
niko_s(a)web.de wrote:
Just one
HD. Termination bypassed the drive id and it is not
recognized
so I had to remove it.
What do you mean?
Termination does not need to be recognized and needs no ID ...
- you just need proper termination;-)
Niko
Thanks
Dave
niko_s(a)web.de wrote:
> HI Dave -
>
> Have you terminated the SCSI-chain correctly?
>
> All I can think of....
>
> Regards, Niko
>
>
>
sgroup(a)sgroup.ca
Nikolaus Sieveking
nap - nichtlineareaudioproduktionen
<niko(a)nichtlinear.de>
<www.nichtlinear.de>
_______________________________________________
Sent by the sgroup mailing list
sgroup(a)sgroup.ca
For subscribe/unsubscribe:
http://www.sgroup.ca/mailman/listinfo/sgroup
See
http://www.generalconcepts.com/sgroup/ for more information.
_______________________________________________
Sent by the sgroup mailing list
sgroup(a)sgroup.ca
For subscribe/unsubscribe:
http://www.sgroup.ca/mailman/listinfo/sgroup
See
http://www.generalconcepts.com/sgroup/ for more information.
_______________________________________________
Sent by the sgroup mailing list
sgroup(a)sgroup.ca
For subscribe/unsubscribe:
http://www.sgroup.ca/mailman/listinfo/sgroup
See
http://www.generalconcepts.com/sgroup/ for more information.