X-Apparently-From: Message-ID: <010301c04378$547d05b0$8b8a1004@dbcooper> From: "Patrick Moran" To: References: <200010290356 DOT XAA22793 AT xellos DOT bignet DOT net> <39FBBB35 DOT C76A6C52 AT internet1 DOT net> <00be01c04204$c99dd380$6f1e0404 AT dbcooper> <39FCEAB4 DOT 38845174 AT internet1 DOT net> <010c01c042dd$2426c4a0$3d1e0404 AT dbcooper> <39FE61E5 DOT 12D701B8 AT internet1 DOT net> Subject: Re: Date: Tue, 31 Oct 2000 13:19:31 -0700 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-Priority: 3 X-MSMail-Priority: Normal X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 5.00.3018.1300 X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V5.00.3018.1300 Reply-To: opendos AT delorie DOT com ----- Original Message ----- From: To: Sent: Monday, October 30, 2000 11:08 PM Subject: Re: > > Oooops, I just wrote a message about WIPEDISK. I don't use it very much, I > > use Central Point BULKERAS that came with COPYIIPC. > > Thats just for floppies isn't it? I am using Wipe on the Hard disk. I have never had a reason to try it on a hard drive, but I would suspect it is just for floppies. In fact it must be, because hard drives are generally hard sectored. To effective really wipe the HD you need to do a lowlevel format. You were or someone was talking about floppies as well. > > I have a 3.1 Seagate Diff (HVD) drive here that I cannot use. I'll sell it > > to you > > for a good price. It is a full height drive. I even downloaded the manual > > for it from Seagate. it is a used drive. It's boxed up and ready to go. > > Whats a good price? I don't currently have room for a 5.25" drive. I > am keeping my eyes out for a nice external case on Ebay, However. Make me an offer. I have seen really good external cases on ebay at really good prices. They also include power supplies. I have seen them go for under $20 and these are brand new ones. What I intend to do eventually is get an ATX compatible tower case with a MB slide out panel and use this AT full tower case for SCSI drives. It can hold up to 3 FH drives internally and I have 5 exposed 1/2h bays. I could even put a cage it it with the mother board and put more drives it it. I can currently without modifications put 11 1/2h drives in and and a ton of LP drives in it. I can set it up as a RAID without buying expensive controllers with Linux software. There is a Linux HOWTO or mini-HOWTO about doing this. I would like to get several 9GB SCSI UW drives. They are getting cheap now. > > My > > stupid manual said that it had differential capability. > > They probably used the same manaul for both card versions. I have > noticed that one must be carefull of model numbers when dealing with > SCSI cards, no matter what comany. I don't think so, because these were OEM cards and the company I bought it from created their own manual and they did not sell HVD contorllers. I think someone inavertently thought the controller would work with all types of drives currently available at that time. LVD drives were available, but they can be jumpered to work signle ended and this is probably what they intended it to mean. I have gotten very good products from them and never had any other problems. It may have even been in the way the worded it. > > Just curious, how do you select which controller to boot from and which ID > > to boot? > > Well, the computer in question is an EISA bus computer, so I have a > little more to accomplish it than than you might. Basically you need to > turn off the bios on one card and enable it on the other. Also, you may > be able to change the boot device ID from within the bios program of the > booting scsi adapter. I boot from device ID 0, but could change it to > any of the others....at least with my Adaptec, but thats in my other > computer. Oh! Yes that was an expensive MB. EISA was very good. Slow for today's standards but great. In fact ALR had a 128 bit wide data buss for some of their systems and it really screamed even though the buss speed it 8MHz. But all the info could travel on different data paths at the same time. ALR made some really great stuff. They also made some junk in their lower performance systems. I can only use ID 0 and 1 for boot on this card. I can disable the BIOS in it, so it would make a good second card for slower rate drives like my CD ROM and Syquest and tape drives. The problem is the number of slots we have to work with. > Of course you may need to run EZ-SCSI, or whatever you may have > afterwords, too. This controller has a non-volatile rAM for setup. I don't even have to manually change jumpers. > > I won't be able to do anything until I get a new MB, because this > > one has the NCR 710/810 in BIOS and recognizes my card. Since I do not have > > a FLASH BIOS I can't delete it, so I am stuck until I get another MB. > > Can't you simply disable the scsi? Can you change the bios address? If > yes, you might have a "disable" choice. No, this is the Mother Board BIOS that I was talking about. I should have made that a little more clear. It an Award BIOS and has no turn off option for it. That is what I was complaining about when I said pinhead software writers that have no clue about the real world. I have not found a utility for Award like AMI has to go in and change thing in CMOS that is not in the CMOS menu. Else I could probably force it off. I don't need it for my card anyway. My card detects this mother board BIOS and let's it take over the boot process. The nice thing about it is non memory is used for ROM in UMB. Pat _________________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com