I surprised you didn't blow up your drives. HVD differential really can wreak havoc on SE devices. :/
Differential SCSI is targeted more towards your higher-end storage subsystems: Enterprise arrays, tape libraries, etc. The only smaller shelves that come to mind that Digital made that were differential are the old Storageworks RaidArray 230 (tan) or the the RaidArray3000 (blue). If you have a regular BA35x shelf, then I am afraid that it's SCSI/SE only. Your only hope on this is to get the "DWZZA" (pronounced "d-whizza") which converts SCSI/DIFF into SCSI/SE. But I imagine those are pretty rare by now. Good luck, AJ Schroeder -----Original Message----- From: Jan Lentfer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, February 11, 2003 6:10 AM To: Kelledin Cc: Debian Alpha Subject: Re: Qlogic 1040B On Tue, 2003-02-11 at 12:38, Kelledin wrote: > IIRC, the 1040B is a high-voltage differential (HVD) adapter. > SCSI is most commonly either single-ended (SCSI-1, SCSI-2, Ultra > SCSI) or low-voltage differential (Ultra2 or greater). HVD was > a stop-gap standard between SE and LVD, and it's electrically > compatible with neither one. HVD controllers only work with HVD > drives, and vice versa. :( > > Just to confirm this, you can either look for a "SCSI DIFF" label > next to the card's external SCSI port, or look for an array of > eight yellow resistor packs--next to the external SCSI > port--running parallel to the internal SCSI connectors. Either > one means you've got an HVD card. Heck, this was something I didn't know :( I found both items on the card. I have a DEC Storage Bay lying around with 2 4.5GB disks. Any chance to get that woring on the Qlogic? Thanks, Jan -- Jan Lentfer System Administrator Molekulare Zellbiologie / AG Holstein, TU Darmstadt, Schnittspahnstr. 10, 64287 Darmstadt -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

