First post, by nsherin
Hi,
I'm currently upgrading a retro PC I bought off eBay. Originally, it came with an IDE CD-RW drive and Compact Flash to IDE adapter for storage. I thought it would be fun to primarily use SCSI devices, as I always wanted high-end SCSI hard drives back in the day, but couldn't afford them.
I have some - very old experience with SCSI, which is limited to a basic AHA-2904 (I think) that used 50-pin SCSI connectors. I had a 2GB tape drive and CD-RW drive connected internally with a terminator attached and a Zip Plus connected externally - all long gone!
The retro PC is a dual Pentium II 233Mhz PC with the following specs:
2x Intel Pentoum 233Mhz CPUs
Tyan Tiger S1692D Intel i440 LX Chipset Motherboard
288MB of RAM
IDE CD-RW
Compact Flash to IDE adapter
Intel Pro 100 Network Card
SoundBlaster 16 Sound Card
SCSI configuration is as follows:
Adaptec AHA-2940UW SCSI Adapter
Seagate ST318406LW Ultra-260 SCSI Hard Drive - the specs from Segate mention Single-ended (SE) and low
voltage differential (LVD) 68-pin connector
HP SureStore DAT 40 Tape Drive - the specs mention LVD/SE Wide Ultra2 SCSI
SCSI cable with 5 connectors plus a terminator - this is marked Ultra-320
The SCSI IDs are set as follows:
Controller - ID: 7
Hard Drive: ID: 0
Tape Drive ID: 3 - Termination Power jumpered to ON
Now I know that using faster SCSI devices on a slower controller means that you're limited to the maximum speed of the controller, which would be 40/MB a second, but the issue is, no devices are detected by the controller.
When I power the machine on, I get the usual CTRL + A option to enter the controller BIOS. I then get two subsequent messages:
Termination not found
BIOS not installed
Booting up with no SCSI cable simply shouws the CTRL + A option plus BIOS not installed.
Here's what I've tried:
SCSI cable connected to card - Connector 1 connected to hard drive - Connector 2 connected to tape drive - Connector 3 Empty - Connector Empty - Terminator
SCSI cable connected to card - Connector 1 connected to hard drive - Connectors 2 - 4 Empty - Terminator
SCSI cable cconnected to card - Connectors 1 - 3 Empty - Connector 4 connected to hard drive - Terminator
SCSI cable connected to card - Connector 1 connected to tape drive - Connectors 2 - 4 Empty - Terminator
SCSI cable cconnected to card - Connectors 1 - 3 Empty - Connector 4 connected to tape drive - Terminator
Unfortunately, any of these combinations doesn't seem to result in getting any devices detected. Additionally, going into the controller BIOS and forcing a manual scan causes the scan to just sit there at Device 0, LUN 0. I have also reset the card back to default settings - this was the first thing I tried when no devices were beuing detected.
Any help or advice would be very much appreciated - to be fair, I'm really starting at the beginning again in terms of my SCSI knowledge, as it must be 20-odd years or more since I last used that technology. If there's anything I've missed off info wise, then please let me know - I've ttied to be as thorough as possible.
Many thanks in advance!