Thank you EVERYONE. Yes I confirmed that the red disc is a heater and the little device on
the side is a temp sensor. All is good.
I will send a new email out with some new questions but wanted to tie off this discussion
with thanks to all
Eugene
-----Original Message-----
From: cctalk <cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org> On Behalf Of dwight via cctalk
Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 9:26 AM
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: IDE Hard Drive Question
I'd measure the temperature sensor. It is most likely a typical thermistor but may be
an RTD. Most RTD's are 100 ohm but there are some platinum on ceramic that are 1K
ohms. Check it both directions with an ohm meter. It might be a solid state semiconductor
type device. If a resistive device, it can likely be replaced by a resistor. If it is 10K
thermistor or whatever just replace it with a fixed resistor.
Put it in the fridge for a few minutes to see if it is a negative or positive temperature
coefficient. Once you know that it should be easy to use a value of resistor that would
tell it that is was at a happy 20c.
You can likely leave the heater leads open.
The temperature sensor is the small black thing. I doubt it is a thermal switch but it
might be. It is most likely to be around specific resistances of 10 ohms, 100, 1K or 10K.
Dwight
________________________________
From: cctalk <cctalk-bounces at classiccmp.org> on behalf of jim stephens via cctalk
<cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Sent: Thursday, June 25, 2020 11:59 PM
To: cctech at
classiccmp.org <cctech at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: IDE Hard Drive Question
On 6/25/2020 11:20 PM, Chuck Guzis via cctech wrote:
On 6/25/20 4:12 PM, Jon Elson via cctech wrote:
On 06/25/2020 05:29 PM, W2HX via cctech wrote:
Does ANYONE have any idea what these 4 wires are
connected to and why?
And anyone give any odds about whether these 4 wires will prevent
this IDE-SD converter from working?
Temperature sensor and heater. Undoubtedly for start-up in extreme
cold conditions.
Certainly looks like that to me also. Sits right atop the
spindle motor.
--Chuck
The drive spec I found for the Conner cfs540a (this drive) shows an operating range
of 5c to 55c.
The top of the range is useful for mil operations, but the 5c spec would be bad if you ran
the drive.
Full military just a casual google says is -55c, and extended industrial is -40c on the
bottom. We did -40 specs for some of our projects, but nothing mechanical. The are at
-40c to 60c for nonoperating, so would be close to the low range if they could heat the
spindle, and let the drive heat itself up.
One issue might be that the sensor will heat up this dongle and allow the thing to run,
but there may be a provision to spin the drive before it is expected to run. A heat up or
warmup feature might be performed besides what Jon suggested with the heater / sensor.
I suspect this thing has to heat up and be at temp before something in the bios or
otherwise allows the drive to run.
The OP might look around and see if there are any of the heater strips around as well, to
allow heating in the drive box as needed.
I may have one of these systems with some extra drives, and the good news is they guy I
bought them from if mine are the same or of similar spec, is that he was putting drives in
the boxes from random drive buys and they were easy to run. He didn't recall the
spindle dongle on his drive pods though.
I'm waiting to hear for sure if the fellow I bought mine from remembers the
manufacturer. The system and an auxiliary box of similar size with more pods came in a
deal I couldn't pass up. My box has got a 486 motherboard and functional 10baseT card
running in it. I plan to use one of the pods to do one of these as solid state to save
runtime on the physical disks.
spec I used at:
ftp://ftp.seagate.com/techsuppt/seagate_utils/allconnr.pdf