On Fri, 19 Jan 2001, Jeffrey l Kaneko wrote:
On Fri, 19 Jan 2001 15:19:29 -0500 (EST) Bill Pechter
<pechter(a)pechter.dyndns.org> writes:
Goldarg
<goldarg(a)dub.net> wrote:
> I recently got a AT&T SCSI drive from a friend and wanted to see
if I
could
Model: 97536DA
Option: STD
Ser No: 3001a97212
Handle With Care
From the model and serial number, I'd guess
that this drive was
made by Hewlett-Packard in the first week of 1990. Those look
like HP model and serial numbers.
http://www.tame.com/hp/hpinfo.htm suggests that a 97536DA is a
330MB ESDI disk drive, OEM version.
If you think it's SCSI, I wouldn't be surprised that it is
high-voltage differential SCSI; HP did that sort of thing.
-Frank McConnell
They were pretty common in both single ended and differential.
I'll bet it's differential SCSI.
Wait a minute, guys. Did this drive come with a bridge board?
I've seen a couple of AT&T units with ESDI drives, with fancy
EMULEX bridges attached thereto. Of course, if yours is an
expansion box, then there would be no controller-- the
emulex bridges could handle two or four drives, depending
on the model.
The Pocket PCRef lists the 'D'suffix as SCSI, Jeff. The ESDI version
has an 'E' suffix. Does not lis the 'DA' suffix, though.
- don
________________________________________________________________
GET INTERNET ACCESS FROM JUNO!
Juno offers FREE or PREMIUM Internet access for less!
Join Juno today! For your FREE software, visit:
http://dl.www.juno.com/get/tagj.