Path: utzoo!utgpu!attcan!hjespers From: hjespers@attcan.UUCP (Hans Jespersen) Newsgroups: comp.sys.att Subject: Re: Spares cont. Summary: SCSI upgrade in 3B2/400 Message-ID: <3411@vpk4.UUCP> Date: 16 Aug 88 13:46:01 GMT References: <9729@netsys.COM> <417@ctisbv.UUCP> <234@a3bee2.UUCP> Organization: AT&T Canada Inc., Toronto Lines: 32 In article <234@a3bee2.UUCP>, grzesiak@a3bee2.UUCP (John Grzesiak ) writes: > same here ... And I would like a copy very much. Also does anyone know > if an older 3B2-400 can be upgraded to SCSI or as an I/O card? > I would like to use a larger drive than I currently have on this one > that I am using. Thanks in advance No problem. If you want to upgrade your old 3B2/400 you need to following: Single-Ended SCSI Host Adapter Card (PEC 73263) and 3B2 SCSI Connect Kit (PEC 73277) The Host Adapter occupied one I/O feature card slot. You then have two options. You can get a DCM/4E (Disk Controller Module) which is a ESDI bridge controller, and put up two four ESDI drives on it (available from AT&T in 147MB and 300MB sizes), or you can get a real SCSI disk unit (the DM/300S or the XM/900S) and skip the bridge controller entirely. The advantage to using the ESDI disks and the bridge controller is that all four disks only take one tap from the SCSI bus (as opposed to four with the SCSI disks). There are 7 available taps on the SCSI Host Adapter thus one Host Adapter can support 7*4*300= 8.4 GigaBytes. A 3B2/400 can have two Host Adapters installed for a total of 16.8 GB (perfect for those large Crystal Writer files ;-) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hans Jespersen | AT&T Canada Inc. | PLACE SILLY TEXT BASED PHONE : (416)499-9400 | GRAPHIC DOODAD HERE. UUCP : { uunet | att }!attcan!hjespers | -----------------------------------------------------------------------------