Xref: utzoo comp.dcom.modems:1669 comp.sys.att:2929 Path: utzoo!mnetor!uunet!husc6!think!ames!pasteur!ucbvax!decvax!mandrill!neoucom!wtm From: wtm@neoucom.UUCP (Bill Mayhew) Newsgroups: comp.dcom.modems,comp.sys.att Subject: Re: Reports on Trailblazer modems (especially with 3B2 and IBM PCs) Message-ID: <1072@neoucom.UUCP> Date: 2 Apr 88 18:39:36 GMT References: <179@beattres.UUCP> Organization: Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine Lines: 46 Keywords: Trailblazer, info, line noise Summary: PC Magazine is full of Sh*t Arrrrrrrrrgh! I think somebody ought to fire Marks and Stone (the authors of the PC Mag article). I don't know what sort ofline impairment tests they did, but they must have been very severe to make the Trailblazer have a poor showing. I have done such things as shout into the receiver or dial DTMF tones while my trailblazer is doing a transfer and it never loses its connection. If one makes enough racket on the line, the Trailblazer will detect that it has received several bad packets in a row, then stop and go through the training sequence over again. The trailblazer is the only modem is the only unit I know that has special firmware supprot for xmodem, kermit and UUCP g protocol. With the built in firware "spoofing" algorithms, I routinely get data transfer rates on my home computer that are equal to the transfer rates between our Vax and the computer in my office at work that has a dedicated line. (Typically 880 char/sec when the Vax is lightly loaded, talking on a 9600 bps port). The trailblazer also provides sterling performance at 1200 and 2400 bps due to its internal adaptive line equalizer. I can not get a hayes smartmodem, for instance, to connect dialing from my home to my office. The Trailblazer has no problem. (There is some sort of sharp high frequency roll-off on the line that gives modems without equalizers fits.) The only thing bad I can say is that there appear to have been bugs in the Telebit version 3.xx firmware that made MNP error correction not work when other brand modems called into a Trailblazer. This seems to have been fixed in 4.xx firmware, as users routinely dial in with MNP modems into my 3b1 at home. I really wonder if the guys at PC Mag actually tested the Trailblazer, of if they just read the glossy press release and wrote something they thought would sound good. If you want to sway your bosses to buy a Trailblazer, show them an article in Unix World by John Blair -- I think it was in the January '88 issue, but I am not positive. About the only modem I know of that does as well at rejecting line impairments at 1200 baud is the 1200 baud internal modem that IBM sells for its PS/2 microchannel products. (By the way, IBM's modem is manufactured by Racal-Vadic, in case you were wondering.) --Bill