Michael, CD-ROM reading heads isn't so hard to find. Why you don't take
a good photo of the CD optics so we can find something compatible?
---
Enviado do meu Motorola PT550
Meu site:
http://www.tabalabs.com.br
----- Original Message -----
From: "Michael B. Brutman" <mbbrutman-cctalk at brutman.com>
To: "CCTalk_list" <cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2012 8:06 PM
Subject: Older CD-ROM refuses to read media - ideas for repair?
I have an old project laying around that I just spent
another two hours on
..
It is an 1993 external parallel port attached CD-ROM. A company called
"Storage Devices Inc" made it, and IBM resold it. The model number is
SCD-683. There are some traces of it if you search the web, but not much
interesting. I have the drivers so that is not a problem.
The CD-ROM is a 1x SCSI unit that uses a caddy. There is a parallel to
SCSI bridge board in the enclosure based on the NCR 53C80 chipset, which
was well known back then. The CD-ROM does show up and talk when used on an
XT running PC DOS 3.3; it responds to commands like eject and it lets me
see its error counts using a utility program.
The problem is that it refuses to read any media that I give it. The drive
is very clean - I removed the top and had a look inside the mechanism to
be certain. It is a caddy loading model so I can't tell for sure that the
head has clear access but everything seems to be operating freely. I'm
using old pressed aluminum discs (OS/2 Warp) which should be fine in any
CD-ROM device. I have tried cleaning the heads with a special CD that has
the magic fibers on it, but nothing is helping. (I even reached in gently
with a Q-tip and isopropyl alcohol, but that did not change anything.)
I'd like to see this thing run - it has a carry handle on the side! Unless
I come up with another idea to try the only way that is going to happen is
if I swap the drive out. The original drive is an IBM CDRM00101 and the
driver is looking for the ID string. So a drive swap with a different SCSI
drive will probably require patching the device driver.
So, any ideas on what I can do to clean the head further? (It might just
be hopelessly out of alignment - I don't know the history of the drive.)
Mike