Rumor has it that jim stephens may have mentioned these words:
Jeff Walther wrote:
Date: Tue,
26 Sep 2006 19:19:55 -0400
From: "Roy J. Tellason" <rtellason at verizon.net>
good
summary Jeff. I cant see anything you got wrong, but might
clarify that there are two terms in the naming of these boards and
others that need to be mentioned.
the W stands for Wide, or 16 bit, or 68 pin connectors. It is true
that you can have W with SCA type 80 pin connectors as well.
the U stands for Ultra Scsi which is the 40 mb/sec or greater.
Erm, not quite. Ultra *can* be 20MByte/sec - if it's a narrow (8-bit) buss.
I've had a few Ultra drives that were only 50-pin.
Scsi orignally was 5mb/sec. then it was doubled by
doing
what was originally called synchronous mode to 10mb / sec.
=-= A couple of skipped steps in the history... =-=
Then, IIRC, Ultra and wide came out at about the same time, each supplying
20MByte/Sec - Ultra by increasing the bandwidth, Wide by increasing the
busswidth.
Then someone got smart, and stuck 'em together for Ultra Wide, and that
gave us 40Meg/Sec.
then ultra 2 came out and went to 80 m / sec. I found
a
page that was out in 1988 announcing the Adaptec products
coming which was the AHA-2940U2W which had the
dual channel chips and U2 transfer rate. That is probably
the double 68 pin internal board you are speaking of.
It claimed that the U2W board also supported LVD
The latest transfer rate is Ultra 160. I don't have any
info on those drives.
Ah, no. The latest transfer rate is Ultra 320 - it's been out for at least
a few years now.
I think the 80 pin SCA is only a matter of the hot
plug
spec and connector, and can be dealt with by adapters
from the 50 pin or 68 pin cables to the SCA back
plane connectors. It also deals with the device address
in the connector.
Although there are 50-pin to 80-pin adapters, remember that 50-pin is only
an 8-bit-wide bus and so your throughput would not be any faster than with
an 8-bit-wide device (of the same bandwidth).
Hope this helps,
Roger "Merch" Merchberger
--
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SysAdmin, Iceberg Computers | for MicroSoft: "We're not the oxy...
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