Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!ucbvax!pro-nucleus.UUCP!hzink From: hzink@pro-nucleus.UUCP (Harry Zink) Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple Subject: SCSI slot problems on the apple II Message-ID: <8905100737.AA12945@crash.cts.com> Date: 10 May 89 00:08:39 GMT Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Reply-To: pnet01!pro-sol!pro-nucleus!hzink@nosc.mil Organization: The Internet Lines: 40 Here's my problem, and hopefully someone will have a solution (of some kind). As you know, if you run a SCSI drive on the apple II series, Prodos can address two devices per slot. This applies to all slots, except slot 5, whehre you can have 4 SCSI devices (2 of them shadowed in slot 2). So far so good. Now let's examine the intelligence behind implementing this scheme. Obviously, slot 6 is always reserved for floppy drives, slot 5 is a normal disk drive slot, but where do most people tend to put their hard drives? Slot 7, the logical choice, of course. Now, which is the slot that apple chose to give the magic extensions of 4 devices to? Slot 5, of course. This is all nice and dandy, except that this way, those of us with 3.5 drives, are forced to put them in slot 7, thereby loosing the option of booting directly from the hard drive (except those of us with a GS). Now you have to turn off the machine, hit reset, and type PR#5. Not really a big deal, but it does show the extreme lack of intelligence of those who even decided to give slot 5 the 'magic' capabilities, ignoring slot 7 conveniently (of course, since that is the one that most users would need). Anyway, enough gripes from me here, my question pertains to a possible solution. I assume that there is special code in Prodos that decides that slot 5 has the special abilities, and all other slots are normal. I also assume that the selection of slot 5 was more or less arbitrary (If I'm wrong on any of these assumptions, feel free to jump in any time). Now, is there some way to patch/modify Prodos to give slot 7 the abilities it should have had in the first place, i.e. the ability to address up to 4 SCSI devices? Has anyone experimented with some modifications that would allow this, or successfully implemmented them? If so, please share this information with the rest of us (most of all ME), so we can run our hard drives from slot 7 once again. profound thanks to those answering this. Hzink@pro-nucleus + hzink@pro-nucleus crash!pnet01!pro-nucleus!hzink : UUCP +