INTRODUCTION
The purpose of this white paper is to help understand common field
issues that you might run into when connecting a SCSI drive (or drives) to various kinds
of SCSI buses, whether cable or backplane. The paper is organized into three sections: background and history of SCSI including terminology, termination basics and field issues. There are seven field
scenarios discussed, each with a checklist of things to look for, and several actual case
studies:
- Connecting NARROW drives to a NARROW bus (50 pin to 50 pin)
- Connecting WIDE drives to a WIDE bus (68 pin to 68 pin)
- Connecting NARROW drives to a WIDE bus (50 pin to 68 pin)
- Connecting WIDE drives to a NARROW bus (68 pin to 50 pin)
- Connecting WIDE SCA-2 drives to a WIDE bus (80 pin to 68
pin)
- Connecting WIDE SCA-2 drives to a NARROW bus (80 pin to 50
pin)
- Connecting WIDE SCA-2 drives to a WIDE bus (80 pin to 80 pin
or proprietary)
This tutorial is intended for an audience familiar with conventional IDE/SCSI terms, PC
operation and understanding of the basics of SCSI technology. While every attempt
has been made to make this tutorial as comprehensive as possible, an individual may
be confronted with a situation which is not addressed within the text.
BACKGROUND
As the SCSI interface has evolved from the original 50 pin connection to
68 and even 80 pins, so has the speed and complexity of the devices that now connect to
the bus. Connecting any SCSI device, let alone wide devices to
narrow buses and vice-versa requires a careful understanding of SCSI
terminology, termination practices, terminators and adapters, and drive specific
requirements. Lets start with an overview of SCSI and the rather confusing
terminology that is in current use (see Table 1).
(back)
HISTORY
The original SCSI interface used a 50 pin connector; the SCSI
"bus" therefore, was 50 conductors and was typically implemented either in a
flat ribbon cable or a backplane. Eight of the conductors were allotted for data lines
(plus one for a parity bit), and therefore became known as an "8-bit wide" bus;
the bus speed and therefore the data rate was limited to 5Mhz (5Mbytes/sec). Both Single
Ended (SE) and differential versions (two different means of electrically driving
the bus) were available but because they used different pinouts, could not be
interchanged. Differential signaling is less sensitive to noise, and can be used over
longer distances, at higher bus speeds. This first version of SCSI is based on an ANSI
standard, which is now called "SCSI 1" and is
also known as "narrow" SCSI. The differential version is known today as
"high voltage differential", or HVD, since they had not yet invented the
low voltage differential in use today.
To increase bandwidth, i.e. move more data on the bus faster, the bus
speed was increased to 10Mhz and called "Fast SCSI". A
new ANSI standard, called "SCSI 2"
defined this interface.
Now it becomes slightly more confusing. As the SCSI documentation began
to get unwieldy, the next ANSI standard, or "SCSI 3", was
broken up into a series of smaller documents, each covering a layer of the
interface. The layer that covers the electrical connectors, pin assignments, etc. is now
called "SPI",
or SCSI Parallel Interface (other layers cover the
commands, protocols, etc.). So the main point here is that SCSI 1, SCSI 2 and SCSI 3 refer
to the documentation, or specs, that further define the interfaces, not necessarily
drive performance, although the latest version, SCSI 3, covers all of the latest features.
Then 8 more data bits (and another parity bit) were added to the bus so
that two bytes at a time could be transferred. This became "Fast Wide SCSI"
which doubled the data rate (not the bus speed) to 20 Mbytes/sec. This new "wide"
SCSI required more conductors, which led to a 68 pin connector; both Single Ended and
differential versions were available.
For easier connection to a backplane and to allow hot
plugging, the SCA-2 (Single Connector Attachment 2) 80 pin connector was developed,
which is used on wide bus versions, only. It is not designed for direct cable attachment,
due to the combination of power and bus signals in the connector.
The next performance increase is "Ultra SCSI"
also known as Fast-20, which uses a bus speed of 20 Mhz; for a narrow bus, this is
equivalent to a data rate of 20Mbytes/sec. "Wide Ultra SCSI",
for a wide bus, is equivalent to 40 Mbytes/sec.
As speed increased, maximum allowable cable length decreased, so to move
up to the next performance level and keep a reasonable cable length, a new signaling
method was developed called Low Voltage Differential, or LVD. This
allows the bus speed to double again, and is called "Ultra2 SCSI",
which is equivalent to 40 Mbytes/sec. for a narrow bus, and "Wide Ultra2 SCSI"
is equivalent to 80 Mbytes/sec for a wide bus, also known as "Fast 40" define in
SPI-2.
Next comes "Ultra3 SCSI",
which, according to the spec, defines as many as 63 different variations of features! A
specific set of these features has been agreed upon within the industry and named "Ultra 160" and
doubles the data rate to 160 Mbytes/sec (wide bus only), also known as Fast-80DT defined
in SPI-3. These new features are: Double Transition Clocking, CRC, Domain Validation,
Packetization and Quick Arbeitrate select (QAS). See Table 1. below for a summary of
current bus speeds and SCSI terminology, as endorsed by the SCSI Trade Association.The next
iteration, now in development, is "Ultra 320"
also known as Fast-160 paced data transfer defined in SPI-4.
(back)
Table 1. STA-Endorsed Terms & Terminology for
SCSI
STA Terms |
Bus Speed,
MBytes/Sec. Max. |
Bus Width, bits |
Max. Bus Lengths,
Meters (1) |
Max. Device Support(7) |
Single- ended (SE) |
LVD |
HVD |
| SCSI - 1 (2) |
5 |
8 |
6 |
(3) |
25 |
8 |
| Fast SCSI (2) |
10 |
8 |
3 |
(3) |
25 |
8 |
Fast Wide SCSI |
20 |
16 |
3 |
(3) |
25 |
16 |
| Ultra SCSI (2) |
20 |
8 |
1.5 |
(3) |
25 |
8 |
| Ultra SCSI (2) |
20 |
8 |
3 |
- |
- |
4 |
| Wide Ultra SCSI |
40 |
16 |
- |
(3) |
25 |
16 |
| Wide Ultra SCSI |
40 |
16 |
1.5 |
- |
- |
8 |
| Wide Ultra SCSI |
40 |
16 |
3 |
- |
- |
4 |
| Ultra2 SCSI (2,4) |
40 |
8 |
(4) |
12 |
25 |
8 |
| Wide Ultra2 SCSI (4) |
80 |
16 |
(4) |
12 |
25 |
16 |
| Ultra 160 SCSI (6) |
160 |
16(6) |
(4) |
12 |
(5) |
16 |
| Ultra320(6) |
320 |
16(6) |
(4) |
12 |
(5) |
16 |
Notes:
(1) The listed maximum bus lengths may be exceeded in point-to-point and
engineered applications.
(2) Use of the word "narrow", preceding SCSI, Ultra SCSI or Ultra2 SCSI is
optional.
(3) LVD was not defined in the original SCSI standards for this speed. If all devices on
the bus support LVD, then 12-meters operation is possible at this speed. However, if any
device on the bus is Single-Ended only, then the entire bus switches to Single-Ended mode
and the distances in the Single-Ended column apply.
(4) Single-Ended is not defined for speeds beyond Ultra.
(5) HVD (Differential) is not defined for speeds beyond Ultra2.
(6) After Ultra2 all new speeds are wide only.
(7) Why are there multiple entries for the Ultra SCSI interface? The answer has to do with
the inherent difficulties of transmitting high speed parallel data over cable or
backplane. Assuming that the SCSI bus is properly terminated, there are three factors that
can still degrade performance on the SCSI bus: a) high frequency attenuation, which causes
the pulses to be rounded off and gets worse with longer cable length. b) skew, which is
the difference in propagation times from one data line to another, which also gets worse
with longer cable length. c) stubs, which are SCSI devices attached to the cable. So, with
a longer cable, there must be less stubs, i.e. fewer drives. With a shorter cable, more
stubs (drives) can be tolerated. This is shown in the Max Device Supported column in the
table.
(back)
TERMINATION - basics
Why terminate?
A pulse propagating along the SCSI bus will reflect from any
rt of the bus that is different from the rest of it. These reflections add and subtract
in odd combinations and cause the original pulse to be distorted and corrupted, thereby
causing data loss. To prevent or minimize reflections from the ends of the bus,
terminators are added to "absorb" the energy from the pulses.
The terminators on the SCSI bus hold the bus in a negated state, any one
of up to 16 drivers could be driving the bus or none. The bus is held in the negated
state as required by the SCSI protocol. The original drivers on a SCSI bus only asserted
(Open collector) and the terminators were used to negate the bus. Drivers that assert and
negate the bus are known as active negation drivers. The negation is less current than the
assertion, the drivers are designed for 2 terminators negating the bus.
Where do you terminate the bus?
[Terminate: from the latin terminus meaning "the
end".]
Termination must be present at two and only two positions on the SCSI
bus, at the beginning of the bus, and at the end, and must occur within 4 inches of the
physical ends of the SCSI bus. Often, the host will be installed at one end of the bus,
and will provide one of the two terminations required.
When do you terminate the bus?
Always. Period. Whenever you want the SCSI bus to operate reliably!
How are terminators powered?
Terminators are powered from the "term power" line on
the SCSI bus. Term power can come from any device on the bus, and is provided by either
the host, a drive on the bus, the backplane, or any combination thereof. Term power is
provide through a diode and fuse - historically - the drop accross the diode and cable
allows for a term power range of 4.0 to 5.25 volts.
What kinds of terminators are available?
Internal: some SCSI drives (pre-LVD) had passive terminators
installed in the drive, and could
be enabled/disabled by setting a jumper or inserted/removed from a socket. Drives with
LVD interface do not have internal termination due to reduce bus loading, and the
fact that in a multi-drive
environment, only one drive needs to be terminated.
External:
In-line (also called feed-through) terminators connect in
series with a SCSI device.
Close-ended terminators plug into a bus connector or may be crimped on the cable.
Passive: resistor networks driven directly by the term power on
the bus.
Active: resistor networks driven by voltage regulators inside the terminator. All
LVD
terminators can be assumed to be active.
What is the difference between passive and active
termination?
Passive termination is a resistor network, 330 ohms from ground to the
signal line and 220 ohms from the signal line to termpower, which is an equivalent
impedance of around 132 ohms. Since typical characteristic impedance of most cable is
between 85 and 110 ohms, this is not a great match. The negation current varies with the
term power voltage which can be from 4.0 to 5.25 volts, the pull up current would range
from 16.5 to 24 mA. This would often required multiple steps to insure the voltage reached
the 2.0 volt at the receiver. An active termination incorporates a small
voltage regulator which generates a stable termination voltage from the raw Term Power
(which may fluctuate) and allows the termination resistance to be lowered to 110 ohms,
more closely matching the cable impedance. Active termination is recommended for
all Single Ended buses at any speed, and is required for Single Ended Ultra
SCSI speeds and above. New systems with active terminates may be powered from a 3.3 volt
source, termpower can be from 2.7 to 5.25 volts.
Other important terminology related to termination, for
the discussion that follows:
Active Negation. Asserting a signal on a Single Ended SCSI bus
requires driving the signal low; de-asserting (negation) is the opposite, allowing the
signal to be pulled high by the terminator. For fastest bus speeds, the signal may be
driven high by a driver in either the host or SCSI device, thus active
negation. Active terminators must not prevent active negation. Active negation is
required for Ultra SCSI (Fast-20).
High Byte. The upper data byte (bits 8-15) on a wide bus. This
includes eight data and one parity bit, for a total of nine bits.
Low Byte. The lower data byte (bits 0-7) on the SCSI bus. This
includes eight data and one parity bit, for a total of nine bits.
Multidrop. A SCSI bus with more than two devices on it.
Multimode LVD/MSE. LVD devices respond to the voltage on the
DIFFSENS line on the bus, and can switch modes from LVD to Single Ended. Active
terminators must drive the diffsense line with 1.3 volts with low current, and therefore
be able to respond to the DIFFSENS line, such that if the voltage is < 0.7v, the
terminator will be in the Single Ended mode; > 0.9 and < 1.9v is the LVD mode.
Should the DIFFSENS line see > 2.4v, the terminator should tri-state off the bus as it
is seeing HVD (High Voltage Differential).
Point-to-point. A SCSI bus with only two devices on it; one at
each end.
Stub length. The distance from the drivers/receivers on the SCSI
device to the bus where it is plugged in. This may include the traces on the drive pcb,
inline terminator, etc.
(back)
FIELD ISSUES RELATED TO CONNECTING SCSI DRIVES
The following seven scenarios represent common field interconnect issues
encountered when connecting SCSI devices to various buses. Typically the drive either
wont be recognized by the host system, may not spin up, or the performance may be
degraded.
1. Connecting NARROW drives (50 pin) to a NARROW bus
(50 pin).
A narrow bus by definition is 50 conductors, but may be either Single
Ended (SE) or differential (HVD). They cannot be mixed on the same bus. There are 3
50 pin connectors defined in the SCSI standards; 50 pin internal (0.1 inch spacing), 50
pin low density (Centronics) and 50 pin high density (0.05 inch spacing). 25 pin
connectors are often used, but are not defined in the SCSI standards, there are a limited
number of ground connections which often cause problems if used on fast or Ultra SCSI
speeds.
- Check for the presence of term power on pin 26 or 38 (center of the
connector second row) of the bus, provided by the host, any drive or the backplane.
- Check for two terminators, one at each physical end of the bus. Many 50
pin drives are internally terminated; check jumper settings to enable/disable.
- Active terminators are required if Ultra SCSI speeds (20 Mbytes/sec) or
higher are being used.
- No more than 8 devices are supported in this configuration; see Table 1.>
- Check maximum bus (cable) length, as described in Table 1.
- Check maximum stub length does not exceed 0.1m (4").
- Check SCSI IDs. Each device must have a unique ID, typically set by
jumper.
- Check for remote start/start delay jumpers and remove if necessary.
(back)
2. Connecting WIDE drives (68 pin) to a WIDE bus (68
pin).
A wide bus can run in Single Ended (SE), High Voltage Differential (HVD)
or Low Voltage Differential (LVD) mode. Single Ended and LVD drives can be mixed, however
the bus will revert to the slower Single Ended speeds (Ultra SCSI) and mode of operation
when mixed, which is determined by the DIFFSENS level on the bus. Although rare, there are
some wide bus applications still running in the HVD mode, which are not compatible with
LVD or SE.
- Check for the presence of term power on pins 17, 18, 51, 52, provided by
the host, any drive or the backplane.
- Older backplanes designed for SE operation may have signal ground lines
sunk directly into the backplane ground, which will not allow them to work in the newer
LVD mode, where the signal grounds have been redefined to become the +side of a
differential pair. If this is the case, LVD drives will only operate in SE mode.
- Check for two terminators, one at each physical end of the bus. The
terminators must be capable of SE and/or LVD modes (i.e. multimode operation).
- Active terminators are required if Ultra SCSI speeds (20 Mbytes/sec) or
higher are being used and the bus is in Single Ended mode.
- Check the DIFFSENS level on pin 16. If any device is Single Ended, the
level will be <0.7v. If all devices are operating in LVD mode, the level must be
>0.9 and < 1.9v for the bus to run in the LVD mode.
- Check maximum bus (cable) length and number of devices supported, as
described in Table 1, for LVD or SE mode.
- Check maximum stub length does not exceed 0.1m (4").
- Check SCSI IDs. Each device must have a unique ID, typically set by
jumper.
- Check for remote start/start delay jumpers and remove if necessary.
- Check for Force SE, Disable Wide, Disable
U160 jumpers and remove if necessary.
(back)
3. Connecting NARROW drives (50 pin) to a WIDE bus
(68 pin).
A wide bus can run in Single Ended (SE) or Low Voltage Differential
(LVD) modes, however certain older narrow drives could be differential, or HVD, which is not
compatible with LVD or SE (be careful not to mix LVD and HVD). If a narrow drive,
running in the SE mode, is mixed with LVD drives, the entire bus will run in Single Ended
mode.
- A cable adapter is required to convert the 50 pin narrow interface to the
68 pin wide bus. If this is a transition point wide bus to narrow, the high byte must be
terminated if there is more than the wide adapter and the last device on the single ended
bus must terminated the bus. If this is a single device with and adapter to wide, the wide
bus should be terminated at both ends of the bus, the adapter should not terminate the
high byte.
- Check for the presence of term power on pins 17, 18, 51, 52, provided by
the host, any drive or the backplane.
- Check for two terminators, one at each physical end of the bus. The
terminators must be capable of SE mode. Some 50 pin drives are internally terminated;
check jumper settings to disable as a narrow drive cannot terminate a wide cable.
- Active terminators are required if Ultra SCSI speeds (20 Mbytes/sec) or
higher are being used and the bus is in Single Ended mode.
- Check the DIFFSENS level on pin 16 of the bus. The narrow drive interface
adapter will normally ground this pin due to the presence of a narrow (SE) drive.
Alternately, there are special adapters that are designed to allow a Single Ended drive to
be attached to an LVD bus. These adapters act as a bridge between Single Ended and LVD
devices and allow the bus to stay in the LVD mode. With such an adapter installed, the
DIFFSENS level should remain >0.9v and < 1.9v.
- Check maximum bus (cable) length and number of devices supported, as
described in Table 1, for SE mode (unless the bridge adapter mentioned above is
installed).
- Check maximum stub length does not exceed 0.1m (4").
- Check SCSI IDs. Each device must have a unique ID, typically set by
jumper.
- Check for remote start/start delay jumpers and remove if necessary.
(back)
4. Connecting WIDE drives (68 pin) to a NARROW bus
(50 pin).
A narrow bus by definition is 50 conductors, but may be either Single
Ended (SE) or differential (HVD). The two have identical looking connectors and cannot
be mixed on the same bus. A wide drive can only be added to a narrow bus if the bus is
Single Ended (SE).
- Check for the presence of term power on pin 26 or 38 of the bus, provided
by the host, any drive or the backplane.
- An adapter is required to convert the wide drive interface to the narrow
50 pin bus connector; the upper byte, or high byte of the wide connector must
be terminated with +5volts inside the adapter, because a floating (not connected) data
line is an undefined signal level and will cause parity errors and arbitration problems.
- Check for two terminators, one at each physical end of the bus. Many 50
pin drives found on a narrow bus are internally terminated; check jumper settings to
enable/disable.
- Active terminators are required if Ultra SCSI speeds (20 Mbytes/sec) or
higher are being used.
- No more than 8 devices are supported in this configuration; see Table 1.
- Check maximum bus (cable) length, as described in Table 1.
- Check maximum stub length does not exceed 0.1m (4").
- Check SCSI IDs. Each device must have a unique ID, typically set by
jumper.
- Check for remote start/start delay jumpers and remove if necessary.
- Check for Force SE, Disable Wide jumpers and
apply as required.
Case study: a Customer connected WD Vantage drive to narrow bus, using
Customer supplied 68 to 50 pin adapter. Drive would not spin up. Bus was properly
terminated, externally. Problem: upper data byte was not terminated with +5v. Solution: WD
provided special firmware (available from WD by special request) that internally
terminates the upper data byte. When downloaded, the drive worked OK. An alternative
solution would be to use a different 68 to 50 pin adapter that provides the necessary
upper byte termination.
(back)
5. Connecting WIDE SCA-2 (80 pin) drives to a WIDE
bus (68 pin).
A wide bus can run in Single Ended (SE), High Voltage Differential (HVD)
or Low Voltage Differential (LVD) mode. Single Ended and LVD drives can be mixed, however
the bus will revert to the slower Single Ended speeds and mode of operation when mixed,
which is determined by the DIFFSENS level on the bus. Although rare, there are some wide
bus applications still running in the HVD mode, which are not compatible with LVD
or SE. There is no term power line on the 80 pin connector, termination must be provided
in the adapter or backplane. The 80 pin connector is designed for hot plugging, providing
sequenced power. Power must be provide by the adapter or backplane. The adapter has the ID
switches, there are no ID settings on the SCA-2 drives, the backplane position determines
the device ID.
The SCA-2 connector is designed for hot plug systems for minimum bus
loading. The used of an adapter for each drive doubles the bus loading, it is recommended
that 2 adapters maximum be used on a system. It is better to use a backplane or 68 pin
drives.
- Check for the presence of term power on the bus on pins 17, 18, 51, 52,
provided by the host, any drive or the backplane.
- Older backplanes designed for SE operation may have signal ground lines
sunk directly into the backplane ground, which will not allow them to work in the newer
LVD mode, where the signal grounds have been redefined to become the +side of a
differential pair. If this is the case, LVD drives will only operate in SE mode.
- An adapter is required to convert the SCA-2 80-pin interface to the wide
68-pin bus connector; check the adapter to make sure that it supports both LVD and SE. See
case study, below. Pin 46 on the 80 pin side is the DIFFSENS line; check that it is at the
correct level for either SE (<0.7v) or LVD (>0.9v and <1.9v) operation.
- Check for two terminators, one at each physical end of the bus. The
terminators must be capable of SE and/or LVD modes (i.e. multimode operation).
- Active terminators are required if Ultra SCSI speeds (20 Mbytes/sec) or
higher are being used.
- Check maximum bus (cable) length, as described in Table 1.
- Check maximum stub length does not exceed 0.1m (4").
- Check SCSI IDs. Each device must have a unique ID, typically set by
jumper.
- Check for remote start/start delay jumpers and remove if necessary.
- Check for Force SE, Disable Wide, Disable
U160 jumpers and remove if necessary.
Case study: a Customer attempted to attach a WD Vantage 80 pin LVD drive
to a 68 pin bus, and the drive was not recognized by the host. The system was a PC with
host adapter, 68 pin cable properly terminated at both ends of the cable. The Customer
used an unknown 68 pin to 80 pin adapter purchased at a local electronics store, which
worked on some drives, but not all. Term power was present on the bus without the drive
present, so the issue was not termination. The problem was determined to be that the
adapter cards signal ground lines were all tied together, and grounded, thus forcing
the drive to operate only in the SE mode. However, the DIFFSENS line (pin 46 on the 80 pin
side) was left floating, not connected to anything. This caused some drives to try to
enter the LVD mode, however the adapter card only supported SE mode, so the drive was
unable to communicate with the host. A few drives using this adapter worked because a
floating DIFFSENS signal (an illegal state) caused them to enter the SE mode. Solution:
Change adapters to one with a grounded DIFFSENS line for SE operation.
(back)
6. Connecting WIDE SCA-2 (80 pin) drives to a NARROW
bus (50 pin).
A narrow bus by definition is 50 conductors, but may be either Single
Ended (SE) Low Voltage Differential (LVD) or differential (HVD). HVD devices cannot
be mixed SE or LVD devices on the same bus. A wide drive can only be added to a narrow bus
if the bus is Single Ended (SE).
- Check for the presence of term power on pin 26 of the bus, provided by
the host, any drive or the backplane.
- An adapter is required to convert the SCA-2 80-pin interface to the
narrow 50-pin bus connector. The upper byte, or high byte of the wide
connector, must be terminated with +5volts inside the adapter, because a floating
(not connected) data line is an undefined signal level and may cause parity errors. The
DIFFSENS line, pin 46 on the 80 pin side, should be grounded for SE operation.
- Some SCA-2 adapters also provide bus termination; if the drive is not at
the end of the bus check that the termination can be disabled on the adapter.
- Check for two terminators, one at each physical end of the bus. Many 50
pin drives found on a narrow bus are internally terminated; check jumper settings to
enable/disable.
- Active terminators are required if Ultra SCSI speeds (20 Mbytes/sec) or
higher are being used.
- No more than 8 devices are supported in this configuration; see Table 1.
- Check maximum bus (cable) length, as described in Table 1.
- Check maximum stub length does not exceed 0.1m (4").
- Check SCSI IDs. Each device/adapter must have a unique ID, typically set
by jumper.
- Check for remote start/start delay jumpers and remove if necessary.
- Check for Force SE, Disable Wide jumpers and
apply as required.
(back)
7. Connecting WIDE SCA-2 (80 pin) drives to a WIDE
bus (80 pin or proprietary).
A wide bus can run in Single Ended (SE), High Voltage Differential (HVD)
or Low Voltage Differential (LVD) mode. Single Ended and LVD drives can be mixed, however
the bus will revert to the slower Single Ended speeds and mode of operation when mixed,
which is determined by the DIFFSENS level on the bus. Although rare, there are some wide
bus applications still running in the HVD mode, which are not compatible with LVD
or SE.
- Check for the presence of term power at the terminators, the SCA-2
connector does not have term power, the devices are not allowed to terminate the bus. Term
power must be provided by the host, or the backplane.
- Older backplanes designed for SE operation may have signal ground lines
sunk directly into the backplane ground, which will not allow them to work in the newer
LVD mode, where the signal grounds have been redefined to become the +side of a
differential pair. If this is the case, LVD drives will only operate in SE mode.
- An adapter may be required to convert the SCA-2 80-pin interface to the
backplane connector; check the adapter to make sure that it supports both LVD and SE. See
case study, below. Pin 46 on the 80 pin side is the DIFFSENS line; check that it is at the
correct level for either SE (<0.7v) or LVD (>0.9v and <1.9v) operation.
- Check for two terminators, one at each physical end of the bus. The
terminators must be capable of SE and/or LVD modes (i.e. multimode operation).
- Active terminators are required if Ultra SCSI speeds (20 Mbytes/sec) or
higher are being used.
- Check maximum bus (cable) length, as described in Table 1.
- Check maximum stub length does not exceed 0.1m (4").
- Check SCSI IDs. Each device must have a unique ID, typically set by the
backplane position.
- Check for remote start/start delay jumpers and remove if necessary.
- Check for Force SE, Disable Wide, Disable
U160 jumpers and remove if necessary.
Case study: a Customer uses a backplane with proprietary DIN
connectors; a small paddle card is connected between the WD Vantage 80 pin drive and the
DIN connector. A standard 68 pin connector is provided on backplane for plug-in
terminator. Terminator has LED showing term power present. System is running in SE mode.
Problem: WD Vantage 80 pin drive wont spin up. The problem was determined to be that
pin 46 (DIFFSENS) on the SCA-2 side of the paddle card was open, not connected. This
allows the drive to go into the LVD mode, not the SE mode. Solution: Customer grounded pin
46 on the paddle card.
(back)
Allan Hughes, 01/17/00
Updated - corrections Paul Aloisi, 05/30/00