Page 4 - Sicherheitsanleitung; Configuring the drive; Setting the SCSI ID. Each device on the bus must have a
Radio and television interference. This product complies withClass B limits for radio noise emissions from computer equipmentas set out in the radio interference regulations of the CanadianDepartment of Communications. Le présent appareil numérique n ′ émet pas de bruits radioélectriques depassant l...
Page 6 - Installing jumpers on the active/passive termination; using Fast SCSI transfer rates, or; Fast SCSI; Active
4. Installing jumpers on the active/passive termination jumper block. If you removed the terminating resistors fromthe drive according to the instructions in step 2, skip this step. If you are either: • using Fast SCSI transfer rates, or • not using Fast SCSI transfer rates, and both ends of the I/O...
Page 7 - Attaching cables; Connecting a remote LED. Remote LED pins are located on; User-configuration jumper block: pins 9 and 10; Attaching the power cable. Attach a system power cable to; the drive power connector.
Attaching cables Refer to Figure 1 on page 6 and Figure 2 on page 7 for thelocations of the connectors and jumper blocks. 1. Turn off the system power. 2. Put on a grounded wrist strap. 3. Connecting a remote LED. Remote LED pins are located on two separate jumper blocks: the options jumper block an...
Page 10 - Mounting the drive; Caution. If you use a screw that is too long, you could damage
6. Attaching the 50-pin SCSI interface cable. Attach one end of the cable to the drive interface connector and the other endto the interface connector on the host system motherboard orthe host adapter. If you are installing multiple drives, use adaisy-chain cable. Verify that pin 1 of the interface ...
Page 11 - Figure 3. Recommended mounting orientations
Interface connector Power connector Figure 3. Recommended mounting orientations ST3390N, ST3655N Installation Guide, Rev. A 9
Page 12 - CMOS setup for AT systems; Note. If you are installing your drive in an AT system and a hard; no hard drive installed option.
CMOS setup for AT systems When you start up your drive for the first time, enter the CMOSSETUP routine. This routine enables you to define a new drive inthe system BIOS. However, because the SCSI host adapter BIOShandles all I/O procedures, you should not attempt to define thedrive type in the syste...
Page 13 - Caution. If you format a drive at any level, you erase all your; Partitioning; Caution. If you partition or format a drive at any level, you erase; High-level formatting
If you choose to low-level format your drive, use the DOS DEBUGutility. The most common DEBUG low-level formatting commandis g=c800:5. Verify the BIOS address (c800) and the offset (5)with your host adapter manual. Caution. If you format a drive at any level, you erase all your data. Back up the dri...
Page 14 - To high-level format the drive, perform the following operations:; Use the FORMAT utility to high-level format the drive. Refer; to your DOS manual for the FORMAT command options.; If you are formatting the boot drive, copy the necessary system; Troubleshooting; Warning. Always turn off the system before changing jumpers or; unplugging cables and cards.
To high-level format the drive, perform the following operations: 1. Use the FORMAT utility to high-level format the drive. Refer to your DOS manual for the FORMAT command options. 2. If you are formatting the boot drive, copy the necessary system files to the drive. In Unix, high-level formatting c...
Page 17 - The screen stays blank when you power up the system.; Make sure the monitor is plugged in and turned on.
• Turn off the system and wait 20 seconds. Turn it back on andmake sure the drive spins up. If the drive does not spin up,check the drive power cable. The screen stays blank when you power up the system. • Make sure the monitor is plugged in and turned on. • Check all cards. Make sure the video card...
Page 18 - Technical support services
During the DOS high-level format, the drive keeps retryinghard errors and reporting the following message. “Attempt-ing to recover allocation units. . .” • This is normal with DOS Version 4.0 or later. DOS messages, “Disk Boot Failure,” “Non-System Disk,” or“No ROM Basic - SYSTEM HALTED,” appear. • ...