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SCSI drive not recognised

blindowl

Well-known member
I have this 4,25 GB SCSI drive I wanted to try in a SE/30, but for some reason it's not being recognised. I took it from a Performa 6400, where it works. This is its current jumper settings, I just wonder if I need to change them around somehow?

1.jpeg

 
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max1zzz

Well-known member
You need to enable termination on the drive which according to that label means a jumper needs to be fitted to the 6th position in from the left of the drive, it likely works fine in the 6400 as that probablly has termination enables on it's cd drive

I think you should be able to take the the 10th jumper in and move it to the 6th if you can't find another (they are likely the hard to find 2mm jumpers) as I don't see any reason the SE/30 would need delay start enabled

 

blindowl

Well-known member
You need to enable termination on the drive which according to that label means a jumper needs to be fitted to the 6th position in from the left of the drive, it likely works fine in the 6400 as that probablly has termination enables on it's cd drive

I think you should be able to take the the 10th jumper in and move it to the 6th if you can't find another (they are likely the hard to find 2mm jumpers) as I don't see any reason the SE/30 would need delay start enabled
But shouldn't it be read from right to left? "12••••••••••1" on the sticker. Which means "ID BIT 2", "ID BIT 1", "ENABLE AUTO SPIN" and "SCSI TERM ON" is currently set. Not sure how to set the ID though. Jumper missing on "ID BIT 0" means ID 0 is set?

Edit: found this jumper setting schematic: https://stason.org/TULARC/pc/hard-drives-hdd/ibm/DDRS-34560-9ES-4560MB-3-5-SL-SCSI3-ULTR.html

So tried ID 0 with auto spin and SCSI term on, but no success.

Not sure about what "Enable TI-SDTR/WDTR" and "Disable SCSI Parity Check" does?

Maybe I should check test it in the Performa again, just so it hasn't broke down.

 
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blindowl

Well-known member
It's weird. It works just fine in the 6400 (I tested it again), but the SE/30 and Performa 460 refuse to recognise it. Think I'll just leave it for now.

Screenshot 2020-08-29 at 09.04.26.png

 

bibilit

Well-known member
Probably an issue with size. 

4,5 Gb. 

Maybe splitting the drive in several partitions first, been there several times. 

 

blindowl

Well-known member
Probably an issue with size. 

4,5 Gb. 

Maybe splitting the drive in several partitions first, been there several times. 
Ah, didn't think there was a size limit, but it sounds very plausible that 4,5 GB is too large for it to handle. Will give it a try!

 

MrFahrenheit

Well-known member
I have lots of experience with this. 
 

Plug the drive into your SE/30. Boot from a disk that has System software. Use FWB Hard Disk Toolkit version 2.5 or 3.0. 
 

Partition the drive as follows:

10MB Macintosh partition -set it to not auto mount. This is the partition that will hold your SCSI driver. 
 

1.9GB (1900MB) Maximum second partition. Use it for your system folder. 
 

1.9 GB third partition. This will show up as your second partition once booted. 
 

Final partition for remaining size. 
 

The SCSI manager on 68K Macs cannot handle drive sizes over 4GB without doing this, and cannot boot if the disk driver and system software are not contained in the first 2GB of the drive. 
 

Here’s the text of a post I made about this on Reddit:

Pro Tip: Using large SCSI hard drives in old Macintosh machines (including Ultra 160 and Ultra 320)

I purchased a PowerMac 8600 that included a 4GB hard drive. The drive died. When I removed it I discovered a special adapter board and the drive was not 50 pin SCSI. The drive was actually a U160 drive with a SCA 80 to SCSI 50 pin adapter. 
 

In the aftermath I discovered this whole new realm of SCSI. And the inexpensive large drives that are in it. 

I found a lot of 4 Quantum Ultra 160 drives 18GB on eBay for $25 US including shipping. That’s about $7 a drive. 

I tried to format one. I ended up killing it. Now down to 3. 

Classic Mac OS is old. Dealing with drives this big requires special considerations. To save yourself some time, here’s a brief rundown of my experience on a 68040 Mac running System 7.6.1. 

FWB Hard Disk Toolkit 3.0 is your friend here. The driver for the drive along with the first partition must exist in the first 1GB of the drive. 

Easy solution:  Use Autoformat to format the drive as a single volume. Then unmount. Set drive to not AutoMount and resize it to 10240 bytes (10MB). Create a 1.9GB or smaller partition for your OS. Then create another partition of the remaining drive space. 

Boom!  You can now boot older System 7 versions on a real SCSI drive on an 68k Mac with tons of GB of free drive space, using inexpensive decommissioned server drives. 

YMMV regarding drive compatibility. I’m currently buying several brands and models and sizes to try on various old Macs and I plan on building a nice vintage Mac SCSI drive compatibility table for everyone to reference. 

Yes I know about SCSI2SD. I’m more of a purist. Plus, I think this is more compatible and it’s far, far cheaper. 34GB drives are under $25 USD and the adapter boards are about $13.

 
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blindowl

Well-known member
I have lots of experience with this. 
 

Plug the drive into your SE/30. Boot from a disk that has System software. Use FWB Hard Disk Toolkit version 2.5 or 3.0. 
 

Partition the drive as follows:

10MB Macintosh partition -set it to not auto mount. This is the partition that will hold your SCSI driver. 
 

1.9GB (1900MB) Maximum second partition. Use it for your system folder. 
 

1.9 GB third partition. This will show up as your second partition once booted. 
 

Final partition for remaining size. 
 

The SCSI manager on 68K Macs cannot handle drive sizes over 4GB without doing this, and cannot boot if the disk driver and system software are not contained in the first 2GB of the drive. 
It worked, thank you so much!

 
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