Scsi Bus Differences - HP C160 Owner's Manual

Hewlett-packard owner's guide monitor c160, c180, c200, c240, c360
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SCSI Bus Differences

A Small Computer Systems Interface (SCSI) bus is an IEEE standard bus for
connecting your workstation to internal and external devices (SCSI devices)
running at different speeds, singly or in combination. Examples of these
SCSI devices are 4-mm DDS-format tape drives, CD-ROM drives, and Win-
chester hard disk drives.
There are two types of SCSI buses available with this workstation - a nar-
row, single-ended SCSI bus (SE SCSI), and a fast, wide differential SCSI
bus (FWD SCSI) (on C160/C180/C200-upgrade), or an ultra wide single-
ended SCSI bus (Ultra Wide-SE) (C200/C240/C360 only). Table 19 shows
the specification differences between these SCSI buses, and Table 20 shows
the SCSI addresses, ID numbers, and arbitration priorities for each.
CAUTION:
Do not mix single-ended and fast, wide devices on any one bus type. Doing this will
cause a system failure.
Table 19
SCSI Bus Differences
Transfer Rate
Narrow Single-
Ended
Up to 5 Mbytes
per second
Fast, Wide Dif-
ferential
Up to 20 Mbytes
per second
Data Bus
Maximum
Width
Addresses*
8 bits
8
16 bits
16
Device
Maximum
Physical
Cable Length
Location
6.0 meters
Internal and
(19.6 feet)
external
25 meters
Internal and
(82 feet)
external
SCSI Connections
SCSI Bus Differences
Controller
Embedded
or Plugable
Embedded
Embedded
153

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