Your right I knew is was ether 0 or 7. I thought you said though that you had a drive set to ID 7 in one of your earlier emails. Regardless it sounds to me as if you have cable or termination problems. Your just going to have to keep swapping them around in the SCSI chain until you get it to work. Also make sure your longer and thiner SCSI cables are first on the chain. Another thing you could do is get an old PC case with power supply mount the drives in it and use internal SCSI cables to loop to each drive. The shorter your cables the better off you will be. This idea would defiantly reduce the clutter on your desktop but you may have a hard time finding an internal SCSI cable for all those drives.
Good luck
TK


On Saturday, June 28, 2003, at 06:57 PM, J.S. Garrison wrote:

on 6/29/03 2:52 AM, Travis Krall at [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Correct me if I'm wrong here but isn't the SCSI ID zero for the logic
board? I don't think you can have a drive set to that address. Thank
god for firewire!!!!
TK
On Saturday, June 28, 2003, at 04:26  PM, Steve Conrad wrote:


No. The motherboard's address is 7.


Jeff


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