T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1923.1 | it's in here | WJG::GUINEAU | | Thu Dec 01 1988 07:31 | 4 |
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do a NOTES> DIR/TITLE="hard" and you'll probably find what you need.
John
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1923.2 | At LAST! Another A500 owner looking for a hard disk... | ODIXIE::MCDONALD | Surly to bed, surly to rise... | Fri Dec 02 1988 15:01 | 27 |
| Or better yet, go pick up a copy of AMIGA WORLD or Amazing Computing.
They've started carrying adds for A500 hard disks. The cheapest
I've seen are Pioneer Computing (< $600 for a 20-meg up to $949
for a 65-meg) and some place called Computer Mart ( $849 for a 65-meg.)
Both of these units come with case, power supply, controller's,
etc... 'everything you need to hook it up and go' so they say.
However, neither of these have the place for the expansion ram.
I've finally convinced my wife that the world will end if I don't
get a hard disk soon, so I've been looking around at what's available.
The more I think about it, the more I think I'm gonna pay a little
extra for a good drive with the slots for expansion ram. I'll want
more memory when it gets cheaper.
BTW, one of my 'minimum requirements' was that the drive be real
SCSI... the murmurings (sp?) I hear around here say that real SCSI
is faster and better.
Also, one question for the general board of gurus. I'm sort of
holding off buying my harddisk until after Christmas in the hopes
that the prices will drop. (You know, after the holidays type sales.)
Does this make sense with something so non-ordinary as a hard drive
for a personal computer?
John
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1923.3 | >>> GVP <<< | WAV12::HICKS | Fan mail from some flounder? | Fri Dec 02 1988 16:00 | 6 |
| Memory Location in Wellesley recommends GVP (Great Valley Products?)
for just such an expansion. A500, 20 to 50 MB disk, 0, 1 or 2 MB memory.
They're available mail-order, but I can't remember the price (seems
to me that they were >$600 for 20 MB).
<<Tim>>
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1923.4 | Can Do it more cheaply and better too | NSSG::SULLIVAN | Steven E. Sullivan | Fri Dec 02 1988 18:47 | 29 |
| For those willing to do a little work collecting the pieces....
o A C-Ltd controller can be had for $250 - list. Less than $200
mail order.
o Seagate ST277 (65 meg 40ms SCSI half height disk) can be had for
$390 (what I paid at a recent computer flea market - new!). Can
be seen in Computer shopper for less than $440.
o A case with power supply can be easily had for under $100. I
bought a baby AT case with power supply for $75. Room for
mounting a 5.25 HH floppy, plus 5 ST277 disks. This only provides
325 meg of hard disk.
o A 50 conductor ribbon cable (4 ft should be more than enough) and
2 50 conductor header connectors. Assembly requires only a vice.
The total cost for a 65 meg disk system that diskperf's at
238k/sec for an A500 is only $675 to $800 depending on how good a
shopper you are. The A500 does have a 68010, that upgrade cost me $14
and it is not clear what affect that has on the diskperf quoted
above.
So, as one can see a disk system for an A500 can be put together
for quite a bit less than a comparable packaged system and provide a
lot of flexibility. Mine has worked with as many as 5 disks at once.
Works fine, lasts a long time...
-SES
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1923.5 | Please tell me it's so! | DIXIE1::MCDONALD | Surly to bed, surly to rise... | Mon Dec 05 1988 21:33 | 14 |
| Re: .-1
You said a 4 ft. ribbon cable? Wait a minute... You mean you can
have a 4 ft. ribbon cable between your expansion door on the side
of the A500 and whatever you're hooking it to? I've been wondering
why all of the A500 add-ons I see have to sit snug up against the
left side of the keyboard. One of the local hardware guys says
it's probably due to the noise and interference problems you get
with longer ribbon cables. I'd be quite happy to hear that add-ons
can be placed behind my keyboard instead of right there where I
usually put my drink and sandwich. :-)
John
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1923.6 | | BAGELS::BRANNON | Dave Brannon | Tue Dec 06 1988 01:28 | 5 |
| re: .5
That's 4 ft. of SCSI 50pin ribbon cable, not an expansion bus extender.
-dave
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1923.7 | Yow! | WJG::GUINEAU | | Tue Dec 06 1988 07:37 | 11 |
|
Yup. The SCSI cable can be (ala ANSI) 6 meters long (about 18 feet). I won't go
into the details, but it may or may not work *well* at 6 meters depending
on your configuration/environment.
As far as the A500 expansion bus. Thats the Microprocessor bus, right? Meaning
the 68000 "pins" head out the side (among others). Can you imagine having
4 feet of PC board etch hanging off the 68000? :-)
John
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1923.8 | Greatly saddened look... | ODIXIE::MCDONALD | Surly to bed, surly to rise... | Tue Dec 06 1988 11:06 | 8 |
| D*MN! This means that after I get my Hard Disk, I'll starve to
death... won't be able to eat while I work anymore. :-(
BTW, how do the SubSystem 500 type expansion boxes deal with this
problem. From what I hear, they have a bus pass-thru. That's about
2 feet.
John
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1923.9 | | WJG::GUINEAU | Egads! I forgot to put a message here! | Tue Dec 06 1988 12:04 | 4 |
|
I don't know. They probably have bus trancievers in thier box.
John
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1923.10 | Bus Passthru | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Tue Dec 06 1988 15:00 | 36 |
| Re: .8
> BTW, how do the SubSystem 500 type expansion boxes deal with this
> problem. From what I hear, they have a bus pass-thru. That's about
> 2 feet.
Poorly. Actually, I have no experience with the SubSystem, so it may
do a better job of it. However, any old timer can tell you about all
the folks that tried and failed to put two "slap on the side" expansion
boxes on their 1000.
In the original Zorro design, Commodore stated that in general, you
could hang one expansion device (a box of slots counts as only one
device) off the bus connector. But if you were real careful and
buffered the bus pass through, you might be able to hang two devices
off the bus.
In the bad old 1000 days, most (all?) of the expansion devices with bus
pass thorough didn't bother to buffer the bus. About half of the people
who had two slap on the side devices got them to work together. About
the other half have terrible problems (which they attempted to solve
by replacing PALs, grounding random parts of the motherboard, using
a ceramic packaged 68000, ...).
People also circulated lists of "compatible" expansion products ("a
friend of mine was able to use a C LTD controller with a Starboard,
but you had to plug the disk controller in first...").
As you've gathered, I don't consider bus pass through to be a very
robust expansion strategy.
By the way, Zorro was the code name for the expansion box for the 1000
designed by Commodore. Commodore never built it (probably due to their
financial problems at the time), but did sell the plans for the box
to anyone with $20. Thus, plug in cards for the Amiga are called
"Zorro cards."
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