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> Be careful with M-Audio Firewire!, Computer Hardware
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post Tue 22 Jun 2004, 15:00
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Be careful with M-Audio Firewire!
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stoprunner
post Tue 22 Jun 2004, 15:00
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I had some trouble with the 410, and M-Audio made clear to me that there are some problems with external drives (spacially mine, a LaCie D2 FW800) It got to a point that I was not able to use my computer, the only temporary solution is to connect the drive to the back of the 410 with the FW400 cable until they figure out the solution.
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_miska_
post Tue 22 Jun 2004, 15:05
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I had this problem connecting my ibook as a firewire slave to a G5, it rendered both firewire busses fu*ked. The guys at mac say it was a short and they happen from time to time, though I'm sure any cheaper construction would add to the problem.
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Synthetic
post Tue 22 Jun 2004, 16:21
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QUOTE (miska @ Jun 22 2004, 08:05)
I had this problem connecting my ibook as a firewire slave to a G5, it rendered both firewire busses fu*ked. The guys at mac say it was a short and they happen from time to time, though I'm sure any cheaper construction would add to the problem.

umm.. I may be wrong but I don't think firewire was meant to be used for networking computer to computer... at least not in its original concept. I have never heard of anyone attempting to do this. Are you sure that it is even possible? I think I would use ethernet if I wanted to network 2 computers even if not as fast as firewire. cool.gif


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arvidtp
post Tue 22 Jun 2004, 16:44
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why yes, it is possible! It's called "Firewire target disk mode". Connect two macs by firewire (one turned off) and start it up holding down the "t" key. That mac then becomes an external firewire drive to the one that is on and appears as a drive on the desktop. Sometimes you can also use the optical drive of the slaved mac too.

I do this all the time to transfer files between my Powerbook and OS 9 iMac which will not network via Ethernet without significant effort.

But once I did have a problem. The powerbook was the slave and it (the powerbook) decided to shut down randomly during a small file transfer. I had to rebuild my directory using techtool deluxe, but everything works now, no hardware problems.

This M-audio firewire thing sounds nasty. Good luck guys.

This post has been edited by arvidtp: Tue 22 Jun 2004, 16:46


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Synthetic
post Tue 22 Jun 2004, 16:56
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hmm... well I guess I stand corrected and learned something new rolleyes.gif

never knew it was possible before cool.gif


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_guest_tunepoet_
post Tue 22 Jun 2004, 17:30
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Ain't this just special. We have discovered that our products may cause your computer serious damage. Thank you for letting us help you avoid rightfully returning our dangerous and defective products for a full refund or brand new replacement, by going through this 26 step procedure. If your Mac suffers expensive damage, we are sorry for the inconvenience. Thank you for choosing M-Audio.

My firewire 410 has been spitting flames (sparking and clicking) for a month, and I thought I was doing something wrong. M Audio is gonna suffer big time headaches if they don’t respect their customers and take an exchange refund or replacement hit on their pocket books. M-audio is a big company and can afford the temporary hit. The fact that they are gonna “help us not to blow our computers (gee, thanks),” is really quite arrogant and irresponsible.

If they do the right thing, I remain an M-Audio customer, but now I don’t trust them. They just put a small percentage of their net profits before the long term respect of their loyal return customers. Lovely. Well, guess they are gonna have to learn ethical business the hard way. It used to be that the customer was always right. But now the customer is always at fault for the failure of some company to back up their products.

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stoprunner
post Wed 23 Jun 2004, 09:41
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I guess we learn something new everyday, and loose something too!!!! biggrin.gif
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bbmozee
post Fri 25 Jun 2004, 15:53
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I too had probs with the FW 410 - forced restarts and FireWire bus conflicts. It would never go off either (even if my Panther 10.3.4/eMac 1.25 was sleeping). Very unsettling. Returned it for a Tascam US-122 and haven't looked back since.
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Lou Kash
post Mon 5 Jul 2004, 13:01
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Hmm... I had problems with FW410's older drivers, but using the latest drivers everything works fine since months. I'm using an iBook G3/700 as well as a LaCie Pocket Drive plugged into the FW410; hot-plugging. But thanks for the warning.

Regarding computer connection over FireWire, it doesn't end with the Target Disk Mode: A new feature of Panther was (is) TCP Over FireWire, i.e. *networking* over FW. It works. (However I don't use it because my router doesn't have a FW bus...) FW in its concept *is* intended for flexible use.

Dying FW Ports in general are nothing new, it's a long known problem with G4 PowerMacs. The ports on my G4/466 died one month after my 3 year AppleCare warranty expired... angry.gif
The easiest fix is a FW PCI card, the drawback is the lack of the "deep sleep" mode thereafter, obviously it's not compatible with this kind of cards.
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