I think I've found a deal on an unused 4.3Gb Seagate ST15230N drive to
put into my external case but it is SCSI-2.
The owner wanted to use it in his SE-30 but it wouldn't work.
Will the Lombard be able to read SCSI-2?
Thanks
--
Andrew in Ann Arbor
--
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On Feb 18, 2005, at 9:07 AM, Andrew in Ann Arbor wrote:
I think I've found a deal on an unused 4.3Gb Seagate ST15230N drive to
put into my external case but it is SCSI-2.
The owner wanted to use it in his SE-30 but it wouldn't work.
Will the Lombard be able to read SCSI-2?
Yeah. The SE-30 should
Will the Lombard be able to read SCSI-2?
Thanks
Probably but you'll most likely need some kind of SCSI-2 to SCSI
adapter. If I remember correctly, regular SCSI has, usually, a
Centronic 50pins connector, while SCSI-2 has a 68pins connector, which
type I don't know.
I was planning to
On 18/02/05 12:41, Andrew in Ann Arbor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Will the Lombard be able to read SCSI-2?
Thanks
Probably but you'll most likely need some kind of SCSI-2 to SCSI
adapter. If I remember correctly, regular SCSI has, usually, a
Centronic 50pins connector, while SCSI-2 has a
On Feb 18, 2005, at 10:25 AM, Laurent Daudelin wrote:
On 18/02/05 11:07, Andrew in Ann Arbor [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I think I've found a deal on an unused 4.3Gb Seagate ST15230N drive to
put into my external case but it is SCSI-2.
The owner wanted to use it in his SE-30 but it wouldn't work.
that drive has a 50 pin narrow (hence the N) interface, and should work
fine for you.DOn't concern yourself with the SCSI-2 designation, all SCSI
flavors can talk to each other just fine. It's the pin count that's of
interest, and 50 pins is just dandy for your purposes.
hth,
dan k
Andrew in Ann Arbor wrote:
I think I've found a deal on an unused 4.3Gb Seagate ST15230N drive to
put into my external case but it is SCSI-2.
The owner wanted to use it in his SE-30 but it wouldn't work.
Will the Lombard be able to read SCSI-2?
Thanks
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