T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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4743.1 | bare drive even cheaper | CAFEIN::KANOUSE | Ken Kanouse NJD SWS | Wed May 15 1991 09:39 | 6 |
| Biil,
Look in the Computer Shopper and you'll see how cheap the
bare drive is - ~$350 for the drive and ~ $75 for the cart. thats
without case or power but that should only add <$100.
Ken
|
4743.2 | NO more floppy backups | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Wed May 15 1991 09:51 | 7 |
| The syquest IS super!
I have one installed in the 5�" bay, hooked up to a Hardframe. I can
"back up" 20Mb hard drive in about 5 minutes using diskmaster.
Jean
|
4743.3 | it's more than functionally | SALEM::LEIMBERGER | | Wed May 15 1991 11:38 | 19 |
| I could order an internal unit for less but I like the thought of the
portability the external unit offers. You could order the seperate
pieces, box with power supply, cables, and the drive then put it
together with the end result yielding the same functionally, but I
doubt that you would end up with the quality built product that I
played with. I have seen many Cheaper alternatives to many devices that
offered the same functionality, but I wouldn't want them on my desk.
I'd opt to spend the $125.00 more than the sum of the pieces for a unit
that I'd be willing to live with over a period of time, that came plug
in ready. I don't care for mail order in general, and I know what I'd
be getting up front with this unit, I also know that I'd have support
getting it online if I needed it. Of course the alternative
to the cheaper route is waiting until I can afford the unit I want.
I'll probably go without before I'd bother to home brew one. Then again
I'm the guy that has a mechanic do my tuneups(had 4 years trade school
in auto mechanics.)
Regardless of all this the syquest is a nice product and would make
a nice addittion.
bill
|
4743.4 | older GVP cards won't do removable devices | SALEM::LEIMBERGER | | Wed May 15 1991 11:57 | 9 |
| The older GVP cards did not support removable devices so what ever
route you choose if you opted for this type of media , be aware that
this restriction is there. I can't speak for other controller makes.
bill
ps. re .1 Thanks for the input, I don't want to give the impression
that I don't appreciate advice, and it has merit for an internal
installation, but I plan on loading a lot of stuff internal in the
future, so I liked the compact external product. I guess it could be
called love at first sight.
|
4743.5 | | CAFEIN::KANOUSE | Ken Kanouse NJD SWS | Wed May 15 1991 13:46 | 7 |
| Bill,
Re -.? No offense taken. Thats why I bought a Supra 4x4 with 30
meg a few years ago instead of just the controller. I know my GVP with
V2.31 roms support it along with the WT150 tape( another useful
device).
Ken
|
4743.6 | I have the MAC Syquest for Amiga | RIPPLE::LUKE_TE | | Wed May 15 1991 16:29 | 21 |
| I bought one of those MAC packaged Sysquest drives for Christmas with
the Advantage SCSI controller from ICD. I was quite impressed with the
speed. I bought my second cartidge just a few weeks ago with the
intention of dividing my stuff up between the two. Unfortunately, my
first cartridge went south on me about the same time. It started
getting lots of read/write errors, many that would halt the start-up
sequence. It would take two or three tries to get a successful boot.
Whenever I ran Quarterback tools, it would find some, but not all the
bad blocks and mark them. I was running the Tools 2-3 times a day, but
never finding bad blocks, yet continually getting read/write errors in
programs. I did a low-level reformat twice, then ran QB Tools which
said there were no bad blocks, then immediately start getting
read/write errors again.
Anyway, I am now using my second cartidge and have retired my first.
Anyone know any way to stabilize a disk like that so that it is
usuable?
Terry
|
4743.7 | How about twice as much space ! | MQOSWS::J_GIGUERE | | Thu May 16 1991 00:18 | 6 |
|
I heard that Syquest came up with the 88 Meg version of removable disk
cartridge ! Have'nt verify my information yet !
Jean-Denis
|
4743.8 | maybe for the power user | SALEM::LEIMBERGER | | Fri May 17 1991 06:10 | 5 |
| ads for The 88 meg have been in the rags for awhile now. I like the
thought of that kind of storage but I don't like the thought of one
88meg partition. Gee I could get one of those,and then another to back
it up, and then....................
bill
|
4743.9 | | KAOFS::J_DESROSIERS | Lets procrastinate....tomorrow | Fri May 17 1991 14:51 | 20 |
| The partition does NOT have to be equal to the size of the cartrige.
Since the "disks" are removeable, the partitions must be the same for
all you cartriges if you intend to swap often, on the other hand, if
you reset each time you change the cartrige, the partition information
is not taken into account.
At present, I have three cartriges and all three are one partition. I
can change them anytime I want without a reboot. So far the drive has
performed flawlessly. My main use is for archives (backups) storing
large files (animations and pictures) and misc stuff (fred fish files).
The only thing I see wrong with the Syquest is the ease of storing lots
of stuff that is not backed up. A better set-up would be a large HD
(200+Mb) with a high speed tape backup.
The may edition of MacWorld covers the Syquest, the Richoh and the
Bernouilli drives with acceptable detail.
Jean
|
4743.10 | I'll take the blame | MRKTNG::PRICE | Dave Price DTN 264-3467 | Fri May 17 1991 18:32 | 23 |
| I'll take the blame for you guys who get "Syquest" envy...
I am a longtime Mac user who just got an Amiga. When I found
out that the SCSI on the Amiga supports the Mac hard drives,
I decided to get a GVP SCSI card for my A2000.
I bought it from System Eyes, but I also brought my Syquest in
so they could show me how to format the sucker. Steve at System
Eyes really went bonkers over the unit and now he's selling them.
In the Mac community, Syquests are used like floppies by people
who trade PD software and such... they are definitely the
"standard". So standard, in fact, that I have two of them so
I can copy them. Also, I use the Syquest units to back up my
300mb external and 200mb internal drives. I also have a Bernoulli
drive for the Mac, but Bernoulli cartridges never became a hit
like Syquests.
Incidentally, the 88mb Syquests ARE shipping... but they are
VERY costly. They can read the older 44mb cartridges, but can't
write to them. There's also a 128mb magneto optical cartridge
that's only 3-1/2" (fits in your shirt pocket) that's getting
popular in the Mac community. I believe it's also available for
Digital systems.
|
4743.11 | Several months on... | KERNEL::HOGGAND | | Wed Aug 21 1991 12:19 | 9 |
| Hi there,
Does anyone in the UK have current prices on these (44 and 88MB) drives
and the media for them? Does anyone ship them in the UK? I was saving
the bay for a cdrom drive, but these seem a better use for it.....
Dave
|
4743.12 | | LODGE::LEN | David M. Len | Mon Aug 26 1991 11:02 | 9 |
| I don't know about the UK. But I was just at the Computer Fest in
Dayton, Ohio this weekend. And one company was selling the Syquest
internal for $325. They also were selling a 200MB Seagate 3 1/2" SCSI
drive for $625. This company also deals in refurbished drives, they
had a refirbed Rodime 105MB for $250.
The person I talked with indicated that they buy used drives. They
will buy a dead drive for $1/MB. I don't have there name and number
here, but I will post it this evening.
|
4743.13 | UK Supplier, but are the noisy? | COMICS::HOGGAN | No, I am not kidding !!! | Wed Sep 18 1991 10:17 | 9 |
| Hi,
Are these drives noisy? Or are they whisper quiet (hope, hope).
They are currently available as a bare drive sans cartridge for 330
pounds ex. VAT.
Dave
|
4743.14 | impressions so far | MEO78B::MANDERSON | Amiga + '030 == MicroCRAY | Thu Sep 19 1991 08:21 | 22 |
| Well mine arrived a few days ago. The only hassle I had was with the
power lead. C= had crimped the 'middle' plug too close to the end one
and the lead wouldn't reach both sockets (quantum and syquest). A
little undo the plug and move it fixed that. I then spent an hour
formatting the cartridges I got and away it went.
Impressions. Well if an identically formatted platter is inserted it
doesn't automatically remount. Put the old one back in and all is ok.
Noise. similar to an RZ56 sitting beside me. say no more.
speed diskspeed 3.1, best available was 345K/sec (do me).
impressed with the bits in the box - rails (for PC so no use) plenty
of the right size screws (unlike the GVP!!! - now I can correctly mount
that drive as well). a scsi cable with enough plugs. a PC utilities
disk. docs the whole lot.
only killer - it's only 42 mb not 44!
excellent so far. I like it. suits me better than a disk/tape combo
(well so far anyway).
regards kevin.
|
4743.15 | Dumb question warning... | COMICS::HOGGAN | No, I am not kidding !!! | Thu Sep 19 1991 10:09 | 6 |
| Hi,
Ok. I admit it. I don't know how noisy (quiet) an RZ56 is.....
Dave
|
4743.16 | try an 8" floppy - similar..... | MEO78B::MANDERSON | Amiga + '030 == MicroCRAY | Fri Sep 20 1991 00:23 | 10 |
| mmm not the quietest.....
Its a very chunky sound, relatively high pitched (probably centered on
5kzh ish??)
The fan on a 2000 does not drown it out :-}
kevin
|
4743.17 | Partition disappeared | RIPPLE::LUKE_TE | Terry Luke SLO (Utah) | Wed Oct 09 1991 14:49 | 28 |
| I seem to have lost another cartridge on my Syqest. When I use QB
tools to find bad blocks, when it gets to 80 bad blocks, then suddenly
I have 1000s of bad blocks. It won't check the disk any more after
that since it says there are 1000s of bad blocks and just skips over
them. Last night I said to recheck them all and when I got through my
partition was gone.
First the icon showed up on the workbench screen as DH1:NDOS and I
couldn't access it. I used my formating software that came with my ICD
controller and renamed the partition (the software could still see it).
I still couldn't see it from the workbench or any other application.
I renamed the partition again with the ICD software and everything went
away. Now no icon comes up at all on the workbench screen. Even the
ICD program can't see the parition any more.
Any ideas on how to recover from this. I had backed up only two days
before, but I did a lot of things in those two days that I would hate
to lose.
Is there another program besides QB Tools that will let me map out bad
blocks? QB Tools seems to be doing some strange things to the
removable media. I would like to try something else and see if it
behaves the same way.
Thanks,
Terry
|
4743.18 | SCSI addressing problems with Syquest | WELSWS::GILMOUR | | Thu Oct 17 1991 06:26 | 10 |
| I have a syquest connected to an A590 SCSI port. Its a supra external
jobby. It works fine as SCSI unit #0 lun#0. The problem is it does not
respond to the scsi switch. This works properly. When I connect it to
the A3000 scsci port the internal a3000 drives jams up. On booting WB
via floppy and using the HDtools only one drive the syquest is seen.
Has anyone using dual drives had any terminator problems. I have a
feeling that these are causing read errors at other than SCSi unit #0.
Jim
|
4743.19 | | ELMST::MCAFEE | Steve McAfee | Fri Oct 18 1991 17:56 | 24 |
| I have not had much success with terminating my A3000 properly.
Contrary to what I've heard from memory location and what I've been
told in this notesfile the one configuration which works for me is to
not terminate the external device (tape drive normally, but I tried a
hard drive as well). I tried removing the terminators on the internal
drive and then terminating the external device with no success
whatsoever (wouldn't even boot). According to several people this
would be the proper thing to do. All I can say is not terminating
externally works for me. I haven't attached more than one thing
externally at a time though so who knows if that will continue to work.
Oddly I also find that sometimes when I power up, it doesn't boot and I
have to cold start it again. I suspect this might be related to
termination, but it is rare and seemingly harmless, so I decided to
live with it.
With the external drive terminated, the system hangs fairly often
during heavy disk access (like during a backup to floppy or tape).
I think my internal drive is unit #6 from the factory and I think the
controller is at unit #7, so if the syquest is stuck at unit #0 that
should be OK I would think. I have the external tape drive as unit #0.
-steve
|
4743.20 | | IAMNRA::SULLIVAN | Life gets mighty precious when there's less of it to waste! | Mon Oct 21 1991 10:34 | 14 |
| A SCSI bus should be terminated at both *ends*. It should not have "T"
connections coming off the bus more than about 2 inches. These rules work for
me. I also recall that termination power on the A3000 must be supplied by the
device for externally connected devices... My A3000 is perking along happily.
> I think my internal drive is unit #6 from the factory and I think the
> controller is at unit #7, so if the syquest is stuck at unit #0 that
> should be OK I would think. I have the external tape drive as unit #0.
Are you saying that both the drive and tape are at the same scsi address and
lun? I would expect this to be a problem, unless their presence on the bus is
mutually exclusive!
-SES
|
4743.21 | | ELMST::MCAFEE | Steve McAfee | Mon Oct 21 1991 14:40 | 21 |
|
As I said those rules don't work on my machine. I have no idea why
not. Does the TK50Z supply termination power? I've tried more than
one device externally (but not at the same time unfortunately), they
work without termination and with termination they cause the system to
hang occasionally. Removing the termination on the internal drive so
that the only termination was on the controller and on the external
TK50Z caused the system to not even boot!
>> I think my internal drive is unit #6 from the factory and I think the
>> controller is at unit #7, so if the syquest is stuck at unit #0 that
>> should be OK I would think. I have the external tape drive as unit #0.
>Are you saying that both the drive and tape are at the same scsi address and
>lun? I would expect this to be a problem, unless their presence on the bus is
>mutually exclusive!
I don't have a syquest, all I was saying was that as shipped, I hooked
up an external device at unit 0 (the tape drive) and it works (almost :-)).
-steve
|
4743.22 | | IAMNRA::SULLIVAN | Life gets mighty precious when there's less of it to waste! | Mon Oct 21 1991 16:14 | 6 |
| Another thought...
Some A3000 systems were shipped with terminators on the motherboard. If you have
not checked this, perhaps this could be a source of trouble...
-SES
|
4743.23 | setting luns for syquest and other HD's? | MEO78B::MANDERSON | Amiga + '030 == MicroCRAY | Tue Oct 22 1991 00:39 | 16 |
| Heres a question re bootup etc and a syquest.
I have my regular GVP and quantum set at lun0 and the syquest at lun2.
If there is no cartridge in the syquest bootup is forever. I have set
lun2 with the gvp prep program as the last lun. can I easily swap them
rounds and have the ami boot off the quantum as lun2 with the syquest
as a lower lun number. This was the last lun# will always be there and
boot up will be heaps faster.
Can I boot off other that an LUN0???
did that make sense???
regards
kevin
|
4743.24 | | ELWOOD::PETERS | | Tue Oct 22 1991 09:54 | 22 |
|
First, you are not setting the disk to "lun", your setting the
SCSI ID. They are two very different things.
The slow boot is caused by the GVP controller waiting for the
syquest to spin up. It doesn't matter what ID the syquest is at.
The host checks all the devices and has a time-out for each one.
If you never boot off the syquest you can set the last disk so
the system doesn't see the syquest during boot and then just mount
it in your startup-sequence.
The GVP controllers can boot off any device ID. Each device
on the Amiga has a boot priority ( disks, floppy, ... ). The
controller will boot of the lowest boot priority that has media
in it. This is why every device is checked during boot. You should
be careful with boot priority. You can make your hard disk boot
before floppies and cause real trouble.
Steve P.
|
4743.25 | | IAMNRA::SULLIVAN | Life gets mighty precious when there's less of it to waste! | Tue Oct 22 1991 11:33 | 10 |
| > The controller will boot of the lowest boot priority that has media in it.
Ah, em, that is the highest priority...
Kevin, you might also try swapping the scsi addresses so the quantum is the
highest scsi address and has the last drive bit set in the RDB. Also, setting
highID and highLUN should help also. I do not know why there is lastdrive
when highID and highLUN can perform the same function...
-SES
|
4743.26 | My GVP/SCSI story...fwiw | DECWET::DAVIS | Mark W. Davis 206.865.8749 | Tue Oct 22 1991 14:58 | 36 |
| I have a GVP Series II with two external drives connected. The drives
are old Conners I got in a trade. I, too, had problems first with
running two drives on the same SCSI bus, second with booting.
First, the Conners have jumpers on them that allow you to select
whether the drive or the SCSI controller provide Bus power and
Termination power. When I initially tried to connect the drives the
jumpers were set for the drive to provide Bus power and the SCSI bus to
provide termination power. Consequently I could only connect one drive
to the SCSI bus and it would only work when it was unterminated.
Through trial and error, and a call to a local drive repair shop for
the jumper functions, I set both drives to supply bus and termination
power. Now my SCSI drives and controller work as they should, well
almost. Deselect/Reselect doesn't work with this setup, it hangs on
boot. I've heard on usenet that deselect/reselect, although mentioned
in the GVP manuals, does not function. <-can't verify this but it
doesn't work on MY setup. Both drive show about 900K when using
Diskspeed v3.x, and backing up a 123Meg partition asynchronously,
disk-to-disk with verify and "a" bit setting, to a file using Amiback
takes about 28 minutes. Although I got my setup to function I am still
unsure of a "general rule" for SCSI BUS and TERMINATION power settings
for SCSI drives and Amiga host adapters. If you use the trial and
error method like I did (not recommended), make sure you are confident
in your FLOPPY backups. I had to reformat the drives a number of
times.
Second, I had an intermittent boot problem where the system would hang
upon autoboot or boot with one or more partitions unmounted. I ended
up setting ALL my non-booting partition's BOOTPRI to -128 and my boot
partition to -10 using GVP's SCSIprep (Faaaaastprep) upon a
recommendation from GVP support. Now if a boot floppy is installed the
system will boot from the floppy; if no floppy boots from the hard
drive's boot partition and mounts ALL other partitions.
mark
|
4743.27 | thanks for boot info. | MEO78B::MANDERSON | Amiga + '030 == MicroCRAY | Tue Oct 22 1991 18:44 | 10 |
| re -.2 and -.3
ahh hhmm I meant scsi id.... not lun... (red face..)
thanks SES - that was what I was asking.
I will also consider the boot pro stuff in the -1 note.
thanks guys
kevin
|
4743.28 | It the SCSI ID switch cable (re .18) | WELSWS::GILMOUR | | Thu Oct 31 1991 07:26 | 15 |
| re .18
I finally found out the answer. It was the SCSI switch!. For some
unkown reason the cable with the selector switch is sensitive to the
way it was put up. This seems silly at first but when I put a new cable
off my Supra 48Mb it worked but only one way up!. The terminators are
still in the drive but I am only using one drive. I cannot try an A3000
anymore as I was just visiting a friend at the time. Eventually I want
to put the fixed 48mb on with the Syquest. I am using this config on an
At-a-rat-a-tri STE. Putting the plug round the right way fixed an
intermittent problem on that!.
My thanks for all the replies
Jim gilmour
|
4743.29 | 88 meg Syquest drives getting cheaper | RGB::ROSE | | Sun Dec 29 1991 22:56 | 6 |
| The 88 Mbyte Syquest drives are getting cheaper. Computability is
selling bare drives for $425, cartridges for $125. I just installed one
on the Pee Cee out in our lab. It's pretty fast, too. Seek time is 20ms
and data transfers are about 450KB/sec. Norton SI rates it about 10%
faster than the RZ24 sitting next to it. It's really slick. Just the
thing for pretty ambitious multimedia documents.
|