Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!ucsd!usc!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uakari.primate.wisc.edu!xanth!rlb From: rlb@cs.odu.edu (Robert L. Bailey) Newsgroups: comp.os.cpm Subject: Re: 3.5" on 8" Controller? Message-ID: <12175@xanth.cs.odu.edu> Date: 12 Apr 90 03:54:21 GMT References: <9004110707.AA07305@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU> Reply-To: rlb@cs.odu.edu (Robert L. Bailey) Organization: Old Dominion University, Norfolk Va. Lines: 37 In article <9004110707.AA07305@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU> CUMMINGS@S55.Prime.COM (Kevin J. Cummings) writes: >A long time ago (years) California Digital (a clearing house for dis-continued >products and bargins) sold a 5.25" disk drive that they claimed was an 8" >drive electrically. I assumed that this means that it had the same electrical >interface (did that mean the same edge card connector wired the same way) as >an 8" drive did. I remember that the 8" drives used a 50 pin daisy chained >cable, while the 5.25" drives used a 34 pin cable (basically the same signals, >a few were different, in different places on the cable. I'm running 720K >3.5" drives on the same cable as my 40 and 80 track 5.25' drives (using the >same disk controller). I have nothing on my 8" controller (never bought >any 8" drives B^). I always wondered if I could add a HD 5.25 1.2MB drive >on the 8" controller? My 1.2MB drive on my IBM-compatible PC is hooked to >the same 34 pin connector as my 720K 3.5" drive. That sorta says no. Anyone >successfully run a 1.2MB drive on an 8" controller? I would think that it should be possible to do just that. Years ago, I was putting together a Xerox 820-I and I installed both an 8" SSSD and 3 5 1/4" drives all daisy chained off the same cable. The trick that I used was this: I too, noted that the 50 pin 8" connector and the 34 pin 5 1/4" connector carried the same signals on the same sides, but, they were located at different pin numbers. My solution was to use a 34 pin connector but I used a small saw to cut the connectors slot so that there were no longer any stops on the ends of the connector. (The "stops" as I refer to them are the ends that keep the connector contact #1 aligned with the board contact #1) By removing these, I could then position the 34 pin connector (by offseting it from pin #1) so that the proper signals were connected to the proper pins of the 8" drive connector. I don't have the info handy, but I beleive that I also, had to put a jumper wire on the 8" drive so that the motor on line was activated at the same time as the drive select line. Other than that, I don't beleive that I had to do anything special to make things work. Your problem is the reverse of mine, but, I don't see any reason why it couldn't be done as long as you get the signals to the right pins! Bob Bailey (rlb@cs.odu.edu)