Nope. Wide devices detect and fall back to narrow operation when connected to a narrow bus.Other way round actually.
And floating upper byte data lines will not confuse a narrow controller which is unaware of them.
Nope. Wide devices detect and fall back to narrow operation when connected to a narrow bus.Other way round actually.
Nope. Wide devices detect and fall back to narrow operation when connected to a narrow bus.
And floating upper byte data lines will not confuse a narrow controller which is unaware of them.
Yes, but the AEC-7732 SCSI-to-SATA adapters are meant for optical SATA drives (CD/DVD/BD), NOT harddrives.There is SCSI to SATA. Look for ACARD AEC-7732 (68pin) or AEC-7732U (50pin)
Interesting. Do you know if this IDSCE2i-E SCSI to IDE adapter is a universal one for both harddisks and CD/DVD drives?I found this in ebay but it's quite expensive, shop around or put up a wanted thread here on Amibay. I know they're probably getting more difficult to get hold of. SCSI to IDE was a lot more straightforward just like CF to IDE going to SATA or SD always gets more complicated.
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IDSCE2i-E SCSI to IDE ADAPTER | eBay
An adapterconverting IDE data flow into SCSI bus, 2 available.www.ebay.co.uk
There are plenty of SCSI to SD options out there. Personally I use SCSI2SD drives and with many, there are updated versions of these cards. I find on SCSI2SD Revision 2021 being better. I get around 8MB/PS with these on Phase 5/DCE and WarpEngine setups. Both Zulu and BlueSCSI have been updated. As well to get to these speeds. Some now even boast wireless Networking. The SCSI2SD also has built in Termination.Hi
How does BlueSCSI V2 compare to ZuluSCSI?