Knot to my Knowledge.
They used a sort of inverse SCSI numbering for optical back then. I had
to decode it when I built Frankie II and Frankie III because we had as
many as 4 DVD-RAM drives on the same SCSI string. (Get it wrong and IBM
i think all the drives are the same one!) I believe if you set the
jumpers for 12 the device became address 3. Something like that anyway.
The tape as you see must be device 0 and has no jumpers installed
(Unlike Optical). The load source disk then is address 6 and I believe
that is the only one that mattered. All hard disks needed to be higher
than that. That thing only accepted 4 drives though given my other
experiments I do suspect that if you found a way to extend the SCSI
cable and added a 5th and 6th unit they might function. Just keep
incrementing the SCSI address.
I think the unit number will more likely match the sequence they were
added to the machine.
- DrF
On 1/17/2022 8:51 AM, Patrik Schindler wrote:
Hello,
I'm wondering if there is any mathematical correlation of the SCSI ID of a device on the sole physical SCSI bus of my model 150, and the associated Unit Numbers to be seen in SST.
Device | ID | Unit
------------+----+------
Load-Source | 6 | 1
Other Disk | 5 | 3
CD-ROM | 3 | 6
Tape | 0 | 5
Can anyone shed some light here?
:wq! PoC
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