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| subject: | Re: Apple SCSI Card |
On Mar 2, 4:16=A0pm, David Wilson wrote: > That mapping appears to be the opposite of what Apple documents. > > The following information is found in the "Apple II SCSI Card > Technical Reference Manual" (APDA #A2G0029) on page 3: > > "The Apple II SCSI Card's SCSI ID number is set by positioning a > jumper on a strip of pins. With the jumper positioned across pins 1 > and 16, the SCSI card's ID number is set to 7. With the jumper across > pins 8 and 9, the SCSI card's ID number is set to 0. For most > applications, the SCSI card should be set to ID number 7 (jumper > across pins 1 and 16)." The manual 030-3118-A (referenced earlier) on page 11 says this: "Locate the jumper; when it is on the pins under the number 9, your computer has the highest priority." In narrow SCSI, I believe highest priority is ID #7: http://www.pcguide.com/ref/hdd/if/scsi/confIDs-c.html So, maybe we have a conflict here somewhere? --- SBBSecho 2.12-Win32* Origin: Derby City Gateway (1:2320/0) SEEN-BY: 10/1 3 34/999 120/228 123/500 128/2 140/1 222/2 226/0 236/150 249/303 SEEN-BY: 250/306 261/20 38 100 1404 1406 1410 1418 266/1413 280/1027 320/119 SEEN-BY: 393/11 396/45 633/260 267 712/848 800/432 801/161 189 2222/700 SEEN-BY: 2320/100 105 200 2905/0 @PATH: 2320/0 100 261/38 633/260 267 |
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