-----Original Message-----
From: Ethan Dicks [mailto:erd_6502@yahoo.com]
Not AFAIK. It's the TK50Z-FA doesn't play
nice with others.
Well, then he should be fine ;) Sorry -- I have both, and haven't
paid much attention to model numbers for a while.
> Well, I've never heard of anyone getting it
to work with anything
> else. :) You could try it. It's the one without the ID selector,
> right?
Nope... the -FA is lacking the ID selector (device
'5' always, ISTR)
and doesn't like sharing the bus with anyone else.
That's interesting -- so you might be able to plug it into a MicroVAX
3100 with dual SCSI busses, for instance, if you allowed it to take
the whole bus for itself. (what a waste :)
you could put -FA ROMs in it for use with a MicroVAX
2000, but I
Probably would need set to ID 5.
don't know that you are required to do that. I
don't own a -GA
to test the theory, just a few -FAs.
I have one, but really would rather not swap the ROMs around just
now. I'll eventually get a programmer and save the ROMs in everything
I've got to a CD or something like that -- at that point, maybe I'll
try it.
You will not enjoy depending on a TK50 as a primary
backup device.
It holds 95MB *max* per tape (it streams and if there isn't any
Not so bad, considering that people were "backing up" to zip disks
only recently, which hold 95MB max.
data, it writes filler) and takes multiple passes to
read one tape
(the head physically moves up and down to read different portions
of the tape on each pass). It is *sloooow*. Personally, I prefer
Yes, that's a problem...
1600 bpi magtape to the TK50, even though it take at
least two reels
for equivalent capacity.
I like them better than QIC- ... well, QIC-anything. :) If I were
recommending backup for this machine, though, I'd say a cheap 4mm
(DDS), or 8mm (D8) drive would be great. Forget about hardware
compression, though, just to be safe.
Chris
Christopher Smith, Perl Developer
Amdocs - Champaign, IL
/usr/bin/perl -e '
print((~"\x95\xc4\xe3"^"Just Another Perl
Hacker.")."\x08!\n");
'