A 7600 has SCSI busses 0 and 1 on the motherboad, so PCI EIDE/UATA cards will simulate SCSI busses 2, 3, ...
A 7600, or similar, can have three EIDE/UATA cards.
A 9500 or 9600 can have four such cards.
SCSI Manager 4.3 makes the EIDE/UATA drives look like SCSI drives, and they (the drives) must be formatted as such, using Drive Setup.
You can even convert an EIDE/UATA drive to SCSI, and place it on the motherboard's SCSI channel, using an ACARD SCSIDE "bridge" on each EIDE/UATA drive.
One significant thing about the ACARD product: it supports 48-bit LBA (no practical drive size limit) whereas only UATA/133 cards and a few UATA/100 cards, and no UATA/66 nor UATA/33 cards support 48-bit LBA.
just remember that an old and slow SCSI drive will slow down the entire machine,
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