Oh, I also forgot to ask:  Which museum relinquished this device?  :)
 
Hartmut W Sager - Tel +1-204-339-8331, +1-204-515-1701, +1-204-515-1700


On 3 July 2015 at 19:48, Hartmut W Sager <hwsager@marityme.net> wrote:
> I'm a big SCSI guy, but ...
 
I too am an old SCSI fan, but my interest started to wane when so many SCSI signalling standards and connectors began to proliferate together with SCSI moving totally into the high-end server realm and away from "ordinary" peripherals.  Oh, and then there was that "termination power" headache (usually selected/deselected by jumpers).
 
> The device has a standard dense 50-pin 2-row connector.  I thought at first that meant for sure LVD, but now I'm thinking it just means ultra.
 
It doesn't even mean "ultra", let alone HVD/LVD.  That connector became the norm during the single-ended classic SCSI 2 generation - to my great chagrin, since the Centronics 50-pin connector was so much better.
 
> Is there a way to know what signalling this device uses based just on the connector?
 
No, but:
 
> I checked all available interent specs, incl the original manual, for the device and *nothing* specifies anything other than "SCSI".
 
Since the original manual (lucky you to have that!) doesn't specify anything other than "SCSI", it is a near certainty that this isn't LVD or HVD, but simply good old single-ended classic SCSI (of at least SCSI 2 generation).  It probably isn't "ultra" either, especially if it's a scanner or CD drive or similar slow device rather than a hard drive.
 

On 3 July 2015 at 16:06, Trevor Cordes <trevor@tecnopolis.ca> wrote:
I have an external SCSI device that I'd like to plug in on a 10-15' cable.
The device has a standard dense 50-pin 2-row connector.  I thought at
first that meant for sure LVD, but now I'm thinking it just means ultra.
I need LVD to get over 1.5M cable length, according to spec.  LVD lets me
go to 12M it appears.  If it's just ultra then I'm SOL, I guess.

Is there a way to know what signalling this device uses based just on the
connector?  I checked all available interent specs, incl the original
manual, for the device and *nothing* specifies anything other than "SCSI".

I'm a big SCSI guy, but my memory on the subject is starting to get
hazy due to disuse...
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