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> Does Anyone Still Use Scsi Drives
cornutt
post Sun 15 May 2005, 05:40
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Title says it all: Is anyone using SCSI drives with a recent model Mac? I have a SCSI board in my G4 that I put in originally so that I could transfer files out of my old Power Computing clone when I upgraded. Currently I'm not using it (the old SCSI drive was only 300 MB; it's not worth keeping connected). I guess most people use FireWire for external drives these days, but I'm a bit leery of that since I use a FireWire audio interface (MOTU 828). I'm needing an external drive to take up the overflow from my internal drive to and serve as an archive, something on the order of 200 GB. Would it be worth my while to look for a SCSI drive, or should I forget it and stick to FireWire drives?


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dixiechicken
post Sat 21 May 2005, 15:54
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Be ware that firewire drives usbdrives and serial ata drives and ide parallell drives
are usually the same harddrives.
Firewire, usb, sata & pata are just different protocols/buses and connectors -
you use the same type of drive mechanisms.

However SCSI-drives are different:
1: Scsi is another protocol/connector and bus standard
much smarter than those above,
(tagged command queing & other mumbo jumbo)

2: The hardware IS different. The most important differenc is the mounting
of the spindle. In a scsi-drive the rotating spindle is mounted in TWO
ball-bearings one at the bottom - one at the top.
Hence the 10.000 and 15.000 rpm scsi-drives.

In a ata/ide -- sata/ide drive the rotating spindle is only mounted
in ONE ball bearing at the bottom.

This have a huge effect on price and MTBF (Mean Time Between Failures)
among other things. cool.gif Thats why scsi-raid is commonly used in mission critical contexts

Cheers: Dixiechicken


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