JDW raised an interesting point in the HD20 thread.
Using the John Bass design, which presumably uses obsolete technology, a new MacSCSI card might evolve. Using a commercial SCSI<-->CF interface in conjunction with a homebrew SCSI board, a low power solution would be possible. The MacSCSI design has known limitations, however, so I incline towards cloning one of the third party boards which are more reliable/compatible.
A MacIDE card makes sense too; IDE <-->CF interfacing is trivial, and the John Bass code should give a few clues about connecting to a Mac LB. Hats off to the Apple II IDE/CF adapter crew.
The important thing to remember is that there were SCSI interfaces for compact Macs with 64KB ROMs. Do a search in Google groups for "John Bass", MacSCSI, Fastimes. Or just browse through net.micros.mac. MacSCSI was a free SCSI interface with design information published in Dr Dobb's Journal. On the commercial side, a few SCSI card manufacturers made designs that worked with 64KB as well as 128KB ROMs. So homebrew cards inside a compact Mac are not a ridiculous idea.I have found this thread to be quite interesting, especially the technical points hinting at the HD20's interface and protocol. But for myself, I am even more interested in figuring out how to put a bootable flash drive inside my old non-SCSI Mac 512k!
Using the John Bass design, which presumably uses obsolete technology, a new MacSCSI card might evolve. Using a commercial SCSI<-->CF interface in conjunction with a homebrew SCSI board, a low power solution would be possible. The MacSCSI design has known limitations, however, so I incline towards cloning one of the third party boards which are more reliable/compatible.
A MacIDE card makes sense too; IDE <-->CF interfacing is trivial, and the John Bass code should give a few clues about connecting to a Mac LB. Hats off to the Apple II IDE/CF adapter crew.


