Well, maybe you can tell me what I did wrong.

I pulled out the 2940UW and put the 2940U2W in its place, plugging the
50-pin ribbon into the U2W exactly as it was in the UW.

When I powered up the machine, the U2W saw no devices (at the BIOS listing,
had a hard time booting from /dev/sda2).

I swapped the boards back and everything was fine (both disks, the CD, and
the tape were back).

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, January 27, 1999 3:06 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED];
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Adaptec 2940UW controller driver for Linux


Allison, Bob said ...
> 
> AFAIK, the 274x/284x/294x driver in Linux supports all of the 294x family,
> including the 2940U2W (at least, it was recognized on my system).
> 
> The 2940U2W uses UltraSCSI signal levels (LVD=Low Voltage Differential).
> Although the documentation indicates that it can drive single-ended as
well
> as differential devices, I found that it would not drive my older SCSI-2
> drives.  This is because they require a higher signal voltage.

Untrue.  The controller has a fall back mode in which it will switch to
SCSI-II signal levels to support non-LVD devices on the U2 bus.  However,
mixing LVD and non-LVD on the same bus will reduce the through-put to
SCSI-II levels.  I've a mix of devices on the LVD bus and this is the
results I get.  Perhaps you didn't have proper termination?

> Unless you have LVD devices, you better stick to the 2940UW for SE devices
> and 2944UW for FWD devices.

Na. The 2940U2W does quite well for either.

-- 
Peter A. Castro ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) or ([EMAIL PROTECTED])

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