[rescue] SCSI Cables/Term: LVD -vs- HVD -vs- FW/SE
Greg A. Woods
woods at weird.com
Thu Apr 18 15:10:27 CDT 2002
[ On Thursday, April 18, 2002 at 13:43:48 (-0400), Loomis, Rip wrote: ]
> Subject: [rescue] SCSI Cables/Term: LVD -vs- HVD -vs- FW/SE
>
> - If I need a 68-pin external cable, then I can pretty much use
> any cable as long as the pins are all connected and the
> total bus length is okay--so a 1ft. cable labeled "differential"
> will work just fine with FW/SE or with LVD in addition to
> the HVD it was probably intended for.
See the question "Is the spacing of connectors on a SCSI cable
important?" in the SCSI Quick Start Guide at http://www.scsifaq.org/
> - When termination (internal or external) gets involved, then
> *sometimes* a "perfect" terminator (or an "active" terminator
> which somehow isn't quite the same thing) will work with
> any type of setup--but pretty much if you're working with
> HVD gear then you want HVD terminators.
s/want/need/
> - Although "Ultra160-rated" cables might have some fancy
> braiding or shielding to help with RFI at the higher speeds,
> they'll work fine at lower speeds--and in general plain old
> FW SCSI-2 SE cables will work fine too.
Generally.
> The biggest thing I'm trying to figure out is when
> HVD terms are *needed*, and (separately) when they are
> *acceptable*.
HVD and SE buses are 100% electrically _in_compatible. You cannot
safely use the same terminators on both buses.
> And what's the *real* difference between an
> active terminator, a passive terminator, and a forced perfect
> terminator?
You need at least "active" termination to safely use a SCSI-2 SE bus.
FPT is better though as it clamps off all data signals preventing
overshoot/undershoot.
> (If there's a good reference that tells me all this
> then just point it out--I've checked through a bunch of stuff
> online without finding clear answers...)
<URL:http://www.scsifaq.org/>
Also this, with pretty pictures:
<URL:http://www.a2zcables.com/scsi-cheat-sheet.pdf>
--
Greg A. Woods
+1 416 218-0098; <gwoods at acm.org>; <g.a.woods at ieee.org>; <woods at robohack.ca>
Planix, Inc. <woods at planix.com>; VE3TCP; Secrets of the Weird <woods at weird.com>
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