Though a few system mfg's, notably DEC, still used them well into the '80's,
SMD was a thing of the past by '86 or so, since ESDI, IPI, SCSI, and even
ST506 were quite capable of surpassing its performance at a teensy fraction
of the cost at the controller, at the drive, and even in the cabling.
My CDC Lark drive seems to have gotten by on one 60-pin cable and one 26-pin
together with the KONAN controller I used. I do seem to remember the
typical SMD drive had four 60-pin connectors.
If you don't have any luck before then, check back with me on, say, Tuesday,
by which time I should have found my CDC spec for SMD.
Dick
----- Original Message -----
From: "r. 'bear' stricklin" <red(a)bears.org>
To: <classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org>
Sent: Saturday, January 20, 2001 5:57 PM
Subject: SMD cabling information / Symbolics know-nothings
Derek Peschel and I are sitting here scratching our heads making confused
noises trying to figure out why my Symbolics is broken.
It worked (to a point) before I moved to this new house. Now it's not
working even tot hat point.
Power good. We can't get the FEP booted.
I wonder if I haven't gotten the SMD disk hooked up correctly?
At the drive end, there ar four possibilities for where to connect the
60-pin A cable, and two possibilities for where to connect the B cable. I
have a terminator. We have wasted lots of time searching the web for this
informaiton.
How do I hook up the drive so I know it's connected properly? It's a 760
MB CDC Sabre 9720.
Help!
ok
r.
ps. Does anybody know enough about these machines to help me troubleshoot
it? I think the basic parts all work, but just not yet together. It's a
Symbolics 3650.