Great work !!
I own a HSD10, but never got these stupid external DSSI cables. When I opened the shelf
once, I thought that such a work could be possible, but I never got into it.
But now, I'll try that out with the help of your guide below. The HSD10 is very
similar to the HSD05 in terms of the PCB.
Regards,
Pierre
It's installed and working with a 4 GB Seagate ST34371 on custom clear drive sleds.
I don't have a webserver, so the pictures can't go anywhere, but VMS is being
installed as we type.
Installing a HSD05-AA SBB into a VAX BA4xx series chassis.
Parts needed: HSD05-AA SBB (you don't need the trilink or a micro-ribbon terminator)
50-pin internal SCSI cables (2)
Power splitters/sheet stock (or real sleds for ISEs)
2x 50-pin M PCB mount pin headers
1x 50 pin M IDC pin header
1x Molex-type 4 position power connector
1x DIN-96 Eurocard-style connector
I found most of these supplies in my junk box/parts boards. An oven heated to 375 makes a
good if smelly large--scale component removal device.
If you can find the DIN-96 (VME type) and one of the 50-pin pin headers
in wire-wrap, that would likely make life much easier.
To start with: pull apart the HSD05 SBB and remove the PCB. Pull off the white sticker
between the 68-pin HD connector and the terminator
packs/sockets. Underneath this will be drilled holes for a 50-pin pin header. The board
legend indicates pin 1. Clear the holes and solder in one
of your PCB pin headers in this position. You're done making modifications to the PCB
assembly.
Now take your DIN-96, Molex, and other board-mount pin header. This will interface
between the DIN SCSI out from the HSD and the 50-pin cable
that you will use to carry the SCSI signals in the chassis. If you have RZ-ISE (SCSI)
sleds, you can be really slick and feed the SCSI signal into
the SCSI traces on the backplane, but we won't do that here.
Wire up the Molex first. The signals are as follows (Narrow SCSI-1)
Pins 1,2,3 on A,B,C +12v
Pins 4,5 on A,B,C +5v
DIN SCSI
Row A Row B
Pin 6 2
Pin 7 4
pin 8 6
pin 9 8
pin 10 10
pin 11 12
pin 12 14
pin 13 16
pin 14 18
pin 15 GND
pin 16 GND
pin 17 GND
pin 18 GND 25
pin 19 NC GND
pin 20 GND GND
pin 21 32 GND
pin 22 NC GND
pin 23 36 GND
pin 24 38 GND
pin 25 40 GND
pin 26 42 GND
pin 27 44 GND
pin 28 46 GND
pin 29 48 GND
pin 30 50 GND
pin 31 NC GND
pin 32 GND GND
Now how to connect it . . . take one of your SCSI cables and put the IDC pin header in
towards the end. In the top part of the BA4(3,4)0 chassis there will be a 50-pin
plug that the bulkhead DSSI-0 channel connects to (trace the wires out, there is also the
SCSI-IN bulkhead connector in the same area). Unplug this cable, plug in
your new cable in the slot.
Plug the HSD05 somewhere in the middle (or end), and plug the bulkhead connector in to
the new IDC 50pin M connector on the cable - presto, your existing
termination works, external DSSI disks/clusters can be set up, and your HSD-served disks
can be shared over DSSI should you get another VAX. Of course,
if you had the cables to do that, you'd probably have your HSD in a StorageWorks
Shelf, but the dream can still live.
Plug your other SCSI cable into the adaptor board, and connect up your SCSI disks.
"SHOW DSSI" in the VMB should pop them up as RF72s.
I have verified this with a RZ21 4GB drive.
Note for setup: the HSD05 manual doesn't specifically discuss what the
"format" command is, but it is necessary to run it, unlike
IRIX or Solaris where it is only used when absolutely necessary.
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