For a few years now I have been wanting to push my a1200 a bit further, and was rather disappointed with the results adding my idefix express as it seems to have a known issue when combining with my b1260 so it doesn't give much of a boost to the disk speed. I got the scsi kit to go with the Blizzard but then my project stalled due to the cost of the acard scsi bridges or the other thing I was looking at was one of those combined AztecMonster cards. fast forward a couple of years to today......
Anyway, recently I came across an R-IDSC-E/R on the other bay, which I acquired. I dug out some old cables and got one from here to run from the scsi kit to the bridge, and picked up some power connectors to split the floppy power cable to power everything, and plugged it all in. Much to my surprise it seems to work, simply putting the CF card that had been attached to the ide drive into the cf reader attached to the bridge.
I had set the bridge to SCSI ID 3, enabled the jumper for HD, enabled UDMA with jumper 7 and left jumper 9 open to enable termination.
Now I have never used SCSI before and have read lots of horror stories. If I enable synchronous transfers using unit control, it doubles the speed under sysinfo, from 3,836,253 to 7,214,972 (vs 2,442,335 on my ide setup). This doesn't stick however, so as I understand it, I either add a unit control line to my startup setting this every time, or I use SCSI-Config instead of HDtoolbox, as SCSI config can set this. If I use SCSIConfig however I should completely reformat and partition the card as it uses different values to HDToolbox, and the world will end if I mess with both.
So my first question is : is that about right?
Secondly, I read somewhere about a utility called RDBFlag? Can I use this to set it and keep using HDToolbox?
Thirdly, if I add the unti control line to my startup, will this give me a problem if I then put the card in the IDE setup instead of SCSI?
I am currently deciding whether or not to keep my ide setup alongside this, as the scsi seems to work. I could remove the ide fix express and leave just the DVD drive running straight off the ide, and reuse the CF adapter to connect to the bridge, to save a bit of space when I try and close the case on all of this. Or I could leave myself with both options.
Would be grateful for any advice around this SCSI stuff.
Cheers
C.
Anyway, recently I came across an R-IDSC-E/R on the other bay, which I acquired. I dug out some old cables and got one from here to run from the scsi kit to the bridge, and picked up some power connectors to split the floppy power cable to power everything, and plugged it all in. Much to my surprise it seems to work, simply putting the CF card that had been attached to the ide drive into the cf reader attached to the bridge.
I had set the bridge to SCSI ID 3, enabled the jumper for HD, enabled UDMA with jumper 7 and left jumper 9 open to enable termination.
Now I have never used SCSI before and have read lots of horror stories. If I enable synchronous transfers using unit control, it doubles the speed under sysinfo, from 3,836,253 to 7,214,972 (vs 2,442,335 on my ide setup). This doesn't stick however, so as I understand it, I either add a unit control line to my startup setting this every time, or I use SCSI-Config instead of HDtoolbox, as SCSI config can set this. If I use SCSIConfig however I should completely reformat and partition the card as it uses different values to HDToolbox, and the world will end if I mess with both.
So my first question is : is that about right?
Secondly, I read somewhere about a utility called RDBFlag? Can I use this to set it and keep using HDToolbox?
Thirdly, if I add the unti control line to my startup, will this give me a problem if I then put the card in the IDE setup instead of SCSI?
I am currently deciding whether or not to keep my ide setup alongside this, as the scsi seems to work. I could remove the ide fix express and leave just the DVD drive running straight off the ide, and reuse the CF adapter to connect to the bridge, to save a bit of space when I try and close the case on all of this. Or I could leave myself with both options.
Would be grateful for any advice around this SCSI stuff.
Cheers
C.