OK, that helps some. Thanks.
On Sunday 19 May 2002 11:56 am,Net Llama! wrote: > I'm by no means an expert, but i've user a bunch of different SCSI > drives. With SCSI there are *alot* of name games, and no hard > standard. Sometimes you'll see "Ultra" in front, sometimes you won't. > Roughly speaking, SCSI-1 is 40, SCSI-2 is 80, and SCSI-3 is 160. As > for pin outs, you have 68pin, and 80pin. 80pin (also referred to as > SCA) is a hotswappable drive, almost always found in rackmountable > servers, where high availability is of concern. 68pin is what you > have. Old SCSI stuff had 50pin interfaces as well. > > HTH, > Lonni > > Tony Alfrey wrote: > > Can someone briefly explain the differences in SCSI drive pin > > formats? Specifically, I have Seagate 68 pin internal SCSI drives. > > I believe that they are the so-called "Ultra 2 LVD" format. But > > there appear to be other SCSI formats that have the exact same > > connector, for example, something called "SCSI-3". Can someone > > recommend a simple summary of these various formats? > > Thanks! -- Tony Alfrey [EMAIL PROTECTED] "I'd rather be sailing" _______________________________________________ Linux-users mailing list - http://linux-sxs.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-users Subscribe/Unsubscribe info, Archives,and Digests are located at the above URL.
