Terminating a SCSI Device (92765)
The information in this article applies to:
- Microsoft Windows NT Server 3.1
- Microsoft Windows NT Workstation 3.1
This article was previously published under Q92765 SUMMARY
The release notes mention the importance of terminating SCSI devices
on both ends. They also mention that the Future Domain 845 and 1660
cards do not have termination power. These two issues are related, but
they are not the same.
The SCSI bus must be terminated on both ends of the bus. Someone on
the SCSI bus needs to provide termination power (5V) to allow the
pull-up resistors to terminate the bus properly.
The FD 845 has termination resistor packs on the card. This card does
not place 5V on the termination power wire on the SCSI bus. These
cards rely on the attached SCSI devices to provide 5V on the
termination pin, so your SCSI device must be configured to provide
termination power. Termination power is generally supplied by all SCSI
devices, but is typically switchable. If no one on the bus provides
termination power, your SCSI bus will not function correctly.
For example, to terminate the card/bus on the internal side, set your
CD-ROM to provide termination power. Leave the resistor packs in the
FD. Place a terminator on the CD-ROM drive (if that is the last
device).
Modification Type: | Major | Last Reviewed: | 10/30/2003 |
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Keywords: | kbHardware KB92765 |
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