Thanks very much for the additional info!

Does your drive enclosure have DB-25's on the back, or only on the ISA
cards with DB-25 to CN-50 cables connecting the enclosure?

Where are the Comcode and FCC ID's on yours? 
I don't think mine has those.

My drive enclosure has a pair of CN50s connected by a ribbon cable with
two internal IDC header connectors, looks like a vanilla SCSI
configuration with the two drives on the same bus.

Strangely, mine has only a single molex power drop, perhaps there was
originally a splitter that went missing with the drives. 

Interestingly, the SCSI cable is flipped in twisted sections so that the
drives can be upside down with respect to each other; the orientation
tabs for the two IDC connectors point towards each other and towards the
center of the enclosure. I counted the pins and traced the wires just
to make sure it wasn't a floppy cable. 


Richard Schauer via cctalk <[email protected]> writes:
> On 2025-06-02 13:26, Bill Degnan via cctalk wrote:
>> Do you know the controller model number?
>
> OK, I tore into mine tonight.  Here's what I see.
>
> My machine is a PC 6300, the CPU 2 model.  (I have three of these, and
> another of them was marked CPU 3/X.  Didn't check the third.)  It was
> built in 12/84 by Olivetti in Italy.
>
> The two cables from the drive enclosure go to DB-25 female connectors
> on two separate cards.  In fact, it appears that other than sharing an
> enclosure and power supply, the two drives have nothing to do with
> each other.
>
> The disk controller (marked with a red dot on the connector on my
> machine) was made in 1987.  It is a 1/3-length card, a WD1002A-WX1.
> There are flying wire ends of a ribbon cable from the data and control
> header plugs to the DB-25 connector, which is in a separate slot from
> the card.  Looks like a pretty standard MFM controller to me, not SCSI
> in any way.
>
> The tape controller (marked with a green dot on the connector on my
> machine) was made in 1986.  It is a full-length card, a Wangtek
> 30006-007 rev C.  It has an 8085, 8257, 6264 SRAM, 2764 EPROM, what
> appears to be a chipset of 2x CF40100BN, 1x CF40101N, and 1x CF40102N,
> and some PALS marked Everex.  I couldn't Google up what those
> CF4010... ICs do very readily, although several sellers claim to have
> some.  There are two cards which are almost identical on Ebay right
> now, items 393821606763 and 201549538949, although neither of them has
> the DB-25 connector on the bracket.  On mine it goes to a ribbon
> cable, which goes into the header by means of flying wire ends.
>
> The drive enclosure is an AT&T Comcode 405117714 (I guess I'd take
> that to be a model number, since there isn't any other), with FCC ID
> CLP77N187072.  It is made in USA and contains a 20 MB hard drive and a
> 60 MB (or 67 MB according to the Iotamat tape I have in mine) tape
> drive.
>
> It occurs to me that although I occasionally see AT&T 7300/3B1
> systems, I rarely see 6300s.  Somehow I happened onto the three that I
> have a long time ago and that was it.
>
> Richard KF9VP

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