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| External hard drive replacement |
Posted by: Macintoshguy1984 on 2017-01-07 23:58:04 i have a scsi external hard drive that was DOA from a eBay find, and was wondering if there was a cheap way to get a new drive because all the adapters are expensive. I'm looking at under $50 for every thing
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Posted by: bibilit on 2017-01-08 03:34:18 The disk is dead or the enclosure ??
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Posted by: Macintoshguy1984 on 2017-01-08 13:51:25 the disk is dead
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Posted by: Macintoshguy1984 on 2017-01-08 14:36:52 I also don't want a microsd card as the storage
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Posted by: techknight on 2017-01-08 18:56:07 You can retrofit an SCA drive in its place with the adapter, that will work.
But keep in mind there are certain macintosh models (powerPC comes to mind) that have a SCSI Manager that sees the drive for actually what it is, and it wants to run in 16 bit mode which it cant do so it will lock up the whole machine.
All 68K models work though. Some PowerPC models work. but the 6400/6500 for sure does not.
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Posted by: Macintoshguy1984 on 2017-01-08 19:24:30 is there a 20mb sca drive?
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Posted by: techknight on 2017-01-09 05:01:08 uh, no. 20MB drives dont exist anymore that arnt vintage. You can partition it at 20MB, but it would be a waste.
and the 20MB drives left in the wild, probably are dying or dead. actually the majority of old SCSI drives are dying off. unfortunately they are all senior citizens and they dont live forever.
Without retrofitting what your asking for is impossible. Unfortunately. You may get lucky and find a working or NOS old school drive but your only delaying the inevitable = Failure.
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Posted by: Macintoshguy1984 on 2017-01-09 05:37:52 I have a compact flash that is 20mb, but which adapter should i buy
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Posted by: Cory5412 on 2017-01-09 07:07:41 CF to SCSI is uncommon and the one adapter I can think off off hand (the aztecmonster) is very expensive. SCSI2SD would be better.
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Posted by: Macintoshguy1984 on 2017-01-09 14:36:10 whould this work? http://www.shapeways.com/product/XMF5EE7W8/scsi2sd-v5-bracket?li=gmerchant&utm_source=googleshopping&utm_medium=cpc&gclid=Cj0KEQiAhs3DBRDmu-rVkuif0N8BEiQAWuUJr7AqupWJ-hUw80NrXQsqwJU_X5LQN0kVPIPfonAbNPEaAuzm8P8HAQ
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Posted by: techknight on 2017-01-09 15:15:24 thats just a printed bracket. you need the SCSI2SD by itself which I think the cheapest is $60 something.
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Posted by: Macintoshguy1984 on 2017-01-09 16:17:53 Is there anything cheaper? I have a tight budget
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Posted by: Cory5412 on 2017-01-10 09:33:00 Hang onto your money for a little while and set aside until you can afford a SCSI2SD.
Or, buy random SCSI hard disks on eBay with the hopes that they'll work.
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Posted by: EvilCapitalist on 2017-01-10 09:43:38 ^ That's good advice (the first part) ^
Like others mentioned, even the newest smaller capacity drives are going to be at least 20 years old at this point and it's a crapshoot as to how long they'll stay working. I've got a stack of 80MB Quantums and it seems like every time I go through them to make sure they're still all working another one has died or is in the process of dying. I like keeping things original, including hearing the noise from a hard drive, but have resigned myself to the fact that eventually I'm going to have to go solid-state if I want to keep the machines going.
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Posted by: EvieSigma on 2017-01-10 10:49:18 Can you mount a SCSI2SD to the old Apple drive sleds directly or does it require an adapter? Just curious...
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Posted by: Macintoshguy1984 on 2017-01-10 18:25:17 So what whould be the cheapest option
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Posted by: EvilCapitalist on 2017-01-11 05:43:58 SCSI2SD. You can pick them up on Inertial Computing's site for ~$64 shipped (if you're in the US) and MicroSD cards 4GB and smaller should be very inexpensive. It might seem like a large outlay up front but this is something that once you buy it, you're set for (likely) the life of the machine.
EDIT: fix the link
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