>Hooray. There's an illustrated page for it:
>
><http://www.seagate.com/support/disc/scsi/st4350n.html>
>
>According to this, the scsi address on the drive I have is
>set at zero, with neither of the adjacent 2 pairs jumpered.
>To the right, both "Ground Select" pairs are jumpered vertically.
>And, just to the right of the scsi connector, the left-hand pair of
>pins are vertically jumpered.

OMG, it's huge! ;)

It's worth checking if the link labeled "Motor Start Option" is 
jumpered, every Seagate SCSI disk I've got requires it to be jumpered 
as they, by default, wait for a 'Motor Start' command from the SCSI 
controller and Macs do not issue one on boot, only on access if the 
drive is found to be 'not ready' (is that right). If the drive is 
'not ready' on boot on a Mac it will reject it and wail for a 
different boot disk and throw all it's toys out of the playpen and 
stuff.

-- 
--
Mark Benson

SilValleyPirate - AIM
silicon_valley_pirate_uk - Yahoo!

Visit Flat Pack Macs Online:
<http://fpm.gotdns.com>
Macintosh LC Central

-- 
Vintage Macs is sponsored by <http://lowendmac.com/> and...

 Small Dog Electronics    http://www.smalldog.com   | Enter To Win A |
 -- Canon PowerShot Digital Cameras start at $299   |  Free iBook!   |

      Support Low End Mac <http://lowendmac.com/lists/support.html>

Vintage Macs list info: <http://lowendmac.com/lists/vintagemacs.shtml>
The FAQ:                <http://macfaq.org/>
Send list messages to:  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To unsubscribe, email:  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
For digest mode, email: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subscription questions: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Archive: <http://www.mail-archive.com/vintage.macs%40mail.maclaunch.com/>

Using a Mac? Free email & more at Applelinks! http://www.applelinks.com

Reply via email to