Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)
Date:      Fri, 06 Jun 1997 19:45:54 -0600
From:      "Justin T. Gibbs" <gibbs@plutotech.com>
To:        asami@cs.berkeley.edu (Satoshi Asami)
Cc:        scsi@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: 3940uw with long cables 
Message-ID:  <199706070047.SAA07204@pluto.plutotech.com>
In-Reply-To: Your message of "Fri, 06 Jun 1997 16:37:54 PDT." <199706062337.QAA19597@vader.cs.berkeley.edu> 

next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
>Is this something that can be only cured by somehow shortening the
>cables?

Perhaps.  There are a few important things to keep in mind when
tuning the bus length.

1) Having equal distances between all devices is sometimes more
   important than total bus length since the varying RC constants
   can cause strange signal skew conditions if the lengths aren't
   matched.

2) The ratio of the stub length (the length of the PCB traces going
   into a drive) to the distance between devices should be 1:3.  If
   you are plugging a ribbon cable into a drive, the trace is usually
   about 3.3cm, so you should have 10cm of cable between devices.

3) If the bus is going to be really long, you'll have a better chance
   of making it work if each device places a similar capacitive load
   on the bus.  So, an enclosure fitted with identical drive models
   will often work better than if you mix and match.  Put devices
   like tape and cdrom devices on a separate bus if possible.

4) SCSI cables can range from 90ohm to 140ohms of impedance.  Favor
   the 90ohm part of the spectrum.  You may have to go with twisted
   pair SCSI ribon cables to get near the 90ohm mark.

5) Use FPT terminators instead of the active terminator on the last
   device in the chain or an active external terminator.  For narrow
   SCSI, you'll want an FPT-18 terminator (18 lines including the data
   lines are regulated by the FPT logic, the rest are actively terminated)
   or FPT-27 terminators for wide buses.  FPT-3 terminators are also
   availible (REQ, ACK, and SEL are the only signals protected), so buyer
   beware.

6) Honor the 6m and 3m bus length limits.  6m is the longest for 10MHz
   and 3m is the longest for 20MHz single ended SCSI.  This assumes
   proper stub/gap matching, so real life buses may need to be shorter.

7) If you still can't get your bus to work after tweaking all of these
   other things, go differential.

One company that specializes in SCSI cabling and termination is
CS Electronics.  You can find their product offerings at their
web site http://www.scsi-cables.com/.

--
Justin T. Gibbs
===========================================
  FreeBSD: Turning PCs into workstations
===========================================





Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?199706070047.SAA07204>