Subject: Re: 300MHz beige G3 questions
To: port-macppc <port-macppc@netbsd.org>
From: Andy Ball <andy.ball@earthlink.net>
List: port-macppc
Date: 12/06/2002 19:12:46
Hello Jeff,
JW> The built-in SCSI in the Beige G3 is unenhanced narrow
> SE SCSI-II. 5 MB/s theoretical. It's good for hooking
> up peripherals like CDROMs, tape drives, scanners and
> removable media drives, but not much good for fast
> storage. There are folks who will tell you that it is
> 10 MB/s but they are confused because they believe
> that SCSI-II is synonomous with Fast SCSI-II. The
> Beige SCSI is unenhanced, not Fast.
Thanks, I shall avoid connecting Barracuda 180 drives to it
then ;-)
JW> IIRC, the built-in ATA is ATA-33 (or is it 16?) which
> isn't the fastest around, but only the newer hard
> drives deliver sustained performance better than 33
> MB/s anyway, so it should be adequate unless he's
> really hard core about performance. Hmmm. Apple's
> Developer Note says that it supports ATA-2. Is that
> 33 or 16 MB/s?
ATA-2 includes a range of different options (a bit like
SCSI-2 does). If it were my machine I'd probably look at
adding a nice SCSI card, but the machine's new owner is more
likely to opt for ATA so it might be useful to know which
modes are supported. I wonder if anyone at Apple knows? :-)
JW> ...if you need a 3.3V supply on the PCI card, it's
> available, but by the time the signals leave the card,
> they need to be 5V signals. The slots are 32 bit,
> 33.3333 MHz.
Thanks, now we'll know what to ask for.
JW> If he still has a copy of the Mac OS installed, launch
> the Apple System Profiler from the Apple menu and
> scroll down to "ROM Revision". If he has $77D.40F2
> then he has a Rev. A ROM and slave drives are not
> supported on the IDE busses. If he has a later
> revision then slave drives are supported. If you
> doesn't have Apple System Profiler or a similar
> utility available, you can pull the ROM module and
> read the numbers off of the chips. If the two chips
> read 341S0402 and 341S0403, then he has the Rev. A
> ROM.
I'll forward this to him. I would prefer not to use ATA
slave devices, but it's always worth knowing what you can
and can't do.
Thanks for your help,
- Andy Ball.