marsella@porthos.rutgers.edu (Stacy Marsella) (02/15/89)
I plan on getting a new hard disk for my 7300. I was wondering whether people had any recommendations for internal (half-height) 30 to 40 meg drives. I would prefer to keep it all in one box (ie avoid external drives or supplies). I have been considering the seagate ST138 or ST251, preferably the fast (28ms) version of the ST251 (ST251-1). I however have two concerns. First, will these drives suffer from the oft-mentionned problem of not spinning up when turned on? I have heard repeatedly that the ST251-0 has this problem, but does the ST251-1 or ST138 series have this problem. Secondly, I am very concerned about power requirements and heat dissipation. In particular, the ST251-1 draws 2.4 amps off the 12 volt supply on startup but then settles down to about an amp or less during typ. operation, if memory serves me (I am sure about the 2.4 amps). The draw on the 5V supply is also under an amp. Is the 7300 supply up to the task? Will this 2.4 amps on startup be a problem? In addition, if anyone has any personal experiences with either of these drives or suggestions for an alternative drive, I would appreciate the information. Thanks Stacy marsella@aramis.rutgers.edu
thad@cup.portal.com (Thad P Floryan) (02/25/89)
Re: Stacy's question about use of ST-251 drives in the 3B1/7300 ... I've installed several ST251-1 (28mS) drives for friends in their systems and the drive works "fine"; the "fine" is the caveat re: the stiction problem with not spinning on powerup, but, so far, no ST251-1 drive I've seen has had the problem. See below for more details. For reference, the power supplies in the 3B1 and the 7300 *ARE* different. Specifically: The 3B1 power supply is mfd by Power Systems, Inc. and is their model PS 1610-1 (Convergent part number D-65-00056-1, Rev. B). Its specs: 90-130 VAC, 245 Watts, 58-63 Hz +5 VDC at 20 Amps +12 VDC at 5 Amps -12 VDC at 300 mA The 7300 power is also mfd by Power Systems, Inc and is model PS 1569 (Convergent part number D-65-00042-00, Rev. E). Its specs: 90-130 VAC, 58-63 Hz +5 VDC at 20 Amps +12 VDC at 3.5 Amps -12 VDC at 100 mA The ST251 (40 MB) drives use LESS power than the ol' 10 and 20 MB clunkers that were originally shipped with the 7300, so there's NO cause for alarm using the ST251 in the UNIXpc. The San Francisco Bay Area AT&T Users' Group (officially chartered and sponsored by AT&T, meeting at AT&T facilities) has a number of members who own UNIXpc systems (I own 4 myself :-) Beginning in March, the UNIXpc SIG has its own meeting room (in Sunnyvale) and I'll be showing people how to open their systems and do various fixes, etc. Our library includes *ALL* the docs from AT&T about the UNIXpc, and we're working on getting the source code to the OS and utilities. As an elected officer of the group, I'll be posting more details in the very near future (esp. now that I have more time since I'm not working 25 hrs/day anymore (as I've been during the past 2 months :-) ) At the February meeting, we had speakers from California Disk Drive Repair (Santa Clara, CA) who answered ALL questions about HDs, their usage, their construction, their problems, etc. and I finally got *THE* answer to the problems with Seagate's drives. During assembly, disk drive platters are "wiped" with a chemical that was not being applied evenly, so to reduce the reject rate the workers were applying MORE material causing a buildup of the chemical; at "park" position, the "sled" assembly containing the head(s) "sticks" to the platter preventing main spindle rotation (due to excessive meniscus). A quick "whack" to the side of the drive (or manual rotation of the stepper motor shaft) would "break" the stiction permitting the spindle to spin up. There is NO fix to this problem other than another drive. The "stiction" problem occurs only with certain "batches" of drives, and only seems to surface after 6 or more months of use (yeah, AFTER the drive's warranty has expired). The problem has been noted for both 5-1/4 and 3-1/2 drives. In all fairness, Seagate is NOT the only manufacturer with this problem; Seagate's large market share simply causes the problem to be observed more often with their drives than with other manufacturers' drives. Sigh. Thad Floryan [ thad@cup.portal.com (OR) ..!sun!portal!cup.portal.com!thad ]