[comp.periphs.scsi] Archive 2150S Tape Drive

mliddle@hailstorm.Berkeley.EDU (Micheline Liddle) (04/28/91)

I recently purchased a Archive 2150S but unfortunately a manual for the unit
was not provided.  Since Archive (Irwin's) price is rather steep (> $35 ) I'll
try the net first.

I'm running on the following platform:

386-20 w/ 13MB RAM
Adaptec 1542 SCSI Host Adapter (SCSI Address 7)
Miniscribe 3180S (330 MB) Hard Disk (SCSI Address 0, 1542 external connector)
Archive 2150S Tape Drive (SCSI Address 1, 1542 internal connector)
      Firmware Level -005 (As Reported by SCSICNTL.EXE)

ISC UNIX 2.02 and MS-DOS 3.30



Now for the questions:

1.  When running Roy Neese's SCSICNTL utility (Version 5.1) the following error
    message appears at startup.

	   Start:  Tape Drive 1 error reported
	      Sense key 02:  Not Ready
           Error Code 00:  No additional information

    I hope this is only a jumper setting problem but at this point we
    don't know what the proper settings are.

    The drive was supplied with the following jumper settings (pardon the
    ASCII graphics):

	Looking at the back of the drive, circuit card down.

                             ------
	RxD   *  *   TxD    | *  * | CF2     *  *   ID2
                             ------

	      *  *   DIA      *  *   CF1     *  *   ID1

             ------          ------         ------
	    | *  * | PEN    | *  * | CF0   | *  * | ID0
             ------          ------         ------

    I think I've got the ID[0-2] jumpers figured out (SCSI IDs 0-7)
    but I have no idea what the rest are.

3.  The drive was supplied without termination resistors.  Are they required
    when connected to the 1542's internal SCSI connector?  The Miniscribe
    3180S disk has terminators installed but is connected to the 1542's
    external connector.  If the terminators are needed what value should
    the be?  Any suggested vendors?

4.  If anyone has a spare 2150S manual they'd be willing to part with please
    send email to the address below.

Thanks for any help you can provide.

M. Liddle
  mliddle@ocf.Berkeley.EDU

ken@dali.cc.gatech.edu (Ken Seefried iii) (04/29/91)

In article <1991Apr28.012314.20602@agate.berkeley.edu> mliddle@hailstorm.Berkeley.EDU (Micheline Liddle) writes:
>I recently purchased a Archive 2150S but unfortunately a manual for the unit
>was not provided.  Since Archive (Irwin's) price is rather steep (> $35 ) I'll
>try the net first.

The $35 dollar manual is the OEM manual which you probably don't need.
When I called up Archive to get my 2060Ss set up, they sent me a
little 5 or 6 page manual called something like Quick Setup Guide or
something (I'm at home so I don't have the thing in front of me).
This guide pertty much just shows the jumpers and what they are for,
which is really all you need to know in most cases.  I got mine free,
your mileage may vary.

>
>    The drive was supplied with the following jumper settings (pardon the
>    ASCII graphics):
>
>	Looking at the back of the drive, circuit card down.
>
>                             ------
>	RxD   *  *   TxD    | *  * | CF2     *  *   ID2
>                             ------
>
>	      *  *   DIA      *  *   CF1     *  *   ID1
>
>             ------          ------         ------
>	    | *  * | PEN    | *  * | CF0   | *  * | ID0
>             ------          ------         ------
>
>    I think I've got the ID[0-2] jumpers figured out (SCSI IDs 0-7)
>    but I have no idea what the rest are.
>

Okay...the RxD/TxD jumper is really a little serial port used for
factory testing.  Not useful for anything else.

I don't remember what DIA and PEN stand for, but on the known-working-
under-SCO-Unix Archive 2060S I have here, neither is installed.

CF0-2 set, as I recall, the maximum block size that can be transfered
over the SCSI bus to the drive at one time (is that right?).  You are
currently set for 16K.  I had to set mine to 32K to get them to work
properly.  This setting is all jumpers shorted.

You are correct that ID0-ID2 are the SCSI address.  You are currently
set at ID 1.

>3.  The drive was supplied without termination resistors.  Are they required
>    when connected to the 1542's internal SCSI connector?  The Miniscribe
>    3180S disk has terminators installed but is connected to the 1542's
>    external connector.  If the terminators are needed what value should
>    the be?  Any suggested vendors?

Yes...if you mount it internally, you will need to terminate the
drive.  NOTE!  You will also have to remove the terminators from the
controller board.  They are located right next to the extrernal SCSI
connector on the 1452x's (x = {A,B}).

I don't recall the values of and sources for the terminators.  Ithink,
though, that you should be able to use the resistors that you remove
from the controller.

Hope this helps...

--

	ken seefried iii	"I'll have what the gentleman 
	ken@dali.cc.gatech.edu	 on the floor is having..."

dtb@adpplz.UUCP (Tom Beach) (04/30/91)

> >	Looking at the back of the drive, circuit card down.

stuff deleted to make the newsposter happy!

> 
> Okay...the RxD/TxD jumper is really a little serial port used for
> factory testing.  Not useful for anything else.
> 
> I don't remember what DIA and PEN stand for, but on the known-working-
> under-SCO-Unix Archive 2060S I have here, neither is installed.
> 

DIA sets diagnostic mode. Again, not useful outside of the factory.

PEN is Parity Enable. Jumper in enables parity checking. Jumper out
disables parity checking.

Tom

 ------------------------------------------------------------------------
|  Tom Beach : Sr Project Engineer : Mass Storage Technology             |
|  phone : (503) 294-1541                                                |
|  email : uunet : dtb@adpplz.uucp                                       |
|  ADP Dealer Services, ADP Plaza, 2525 S.W. 1st Ave, Portland OR, 97201 |
 ------------------------------------------------------------------------

nvk@ddsw1.MCS.COM (Norman Kohn) (05/02/91)

In article <27566@hydra.gatech.EDU> ken@dali.cc.gatech.edu (Ken Seefried iii) writes:
>
>>    The drive was supplied with the following jumper settings (pardon the
>>    ASCII graphics):
>>
>>	Looking at the back of the drive, circuit card down.
>>
>>                             ------
>>	RxD   *  *   TxD    | *  * | CF2     *  *   ID2
>>                             ------
>>
>>	      *  *   DIA      *  *   CF1     *  *   ID1
>>
>>             ------          ------         ------
>>	    | *  * | PEN    | *  * | CF0   | *  * | ID0
>>             ------          ------         ------
>>
>>    I think I've got the ID[0-2] jumpers figured out (SCSI IDs 0-7)
>>    but I have no idea what the rest are.
PEN is parity enable.  I forget what DIA is (for DIAgnostic tests?).

-- 
Norman Kohn   		| ...ddsw1!nvk
Chicago, Il.		| days/ans svc: (312) 650-6840
			| eves: (312) 373-0564

gph@viscar.uucp (Gerard Hickey) (05/23/91)

In article <27566@hydra.gatech.EDU>, ken@dali.cc.gatech.edu (Ken Seefried iii) writes:
> 
> When I called up Archive to get my 2060Ss set up, they sent me a
> 

How did you get your drive working? Did you have to play any games or anything?
I am trying to get a 2060 working with my 1540, but everytime I access the
drive, the kernel panics!!!

My setting are almost identical to yours. The only difference is in the 
SCSI id number. I have mine set up as 6 and yours is 2.

If you have any suggestions, I would love to here them.
Thanks.

					Gerard.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  Gerard Hickey                      UUCP: uunet!sir-alan!admiral!viscar!gph
  Viscar.UUCP: (207)439-3123         Snail Mail: 10 North Crescent Dr.        
  24 hour operation--mucho sources               Eliot, ME   03903
Southern Maine's Public USENET Access site

     My employer does not acknowledge that I have any opinions or ideas.  

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ken@dali.cc.gatech.edu (Ken Seefried iii) (05/27/91)

In article <1991May23.050443.2585@viscar.uucp> gph@viscar.uucp (Gerard Hickey) writes:
>In article <27566@hydra.gatech.EDU>, ken@dali.cc.gatech.edu (Ken Seefried iii) writes:
>> 
>> When I called up Archive to get my 2060Ss set up, they sent me a
>> 
>
>How did you get your drive working? Did you have to play any games or anything?
>I am trying to get a 2060 working with my 1540, but everytime I access the
>drive, the kernel panics!!!
>

My experience is strickly with SCO Unix (you aren't specific about
what you use).  I've had the tape drive hang, but never a kernel panic
(and I've done a *bunch* of machines).  

The tape should be at SCSI id 2, the buffer size should be the maximum
(all 3 jumpers strapped).  Thats about it...

--

	ken seefried iii	"I'll have what the gentleman 
	ken@dali.cc.gatech.edu	 on the floor is having..."