>
> Just tried one last experiment, hooked up the SCSI interface from my W2K to
> the output on the 9100, removed the AM5380 (SCSI interface IC) from the
> interface board, then tried to read the 9100's on board SCSI drive - no
> luck, lastly unplugged the 9100 SCSI drive and plugged a Known-To-Be-Good
> SCSI drive to the internal SCSI buss and I CAN read and write to it with my
> W2K notebook. Thus the internal drive MUST be SCSI, but with an unknown
> low-level format. Now we just need a SCSI drive duplicator!
I misquoted. The drive isn't ESDI, its SASI. SASI was the predecessor to SCSI,
only allowing 2 devices. The busses are similar, however. A
SCSI device should work on a SASI bus.
The disk format is one that Microware specified for their OS/9
operating system.
Received on Mon Apr 15 12:00:44 2002
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