Dragster wrote:
Well, finally my troubles are gone, the drive got recognized and it's working now 
Congratulations! Good it hear it all worked out.
What happened? Well...
After doing a lot of tests without success, I set the SCSI ID of the drive to unit 0, removed the termination jumper and put the jumper for the "force narrow" option, then I went to the SCSI menu of the blizzardppc and put the controller itself as unit 7 (the last one) and voilá, it worked!!!
So now the chain is termination (active with the controller if I understand correctly the blizzppc manual), then the HD as ID 0, a Plextor 40X cdrom as unit 1 and a Yamaha CDRW as unit 2 with the termination jumper ON.
Okay, if I'm reading this right, you've got one *narrow* chain:
[Yamaha Narrow Terminator]
[Yamaha CDRW]
|
[Plextor CD-ROM]
|
[IDC50-to-HD68 Adaptor]-[Fujitsu HD in narrow mode]
|
[Host controller in BPPC]
[BPPC Narrow Terminator]
(Yes, the spacing is ugly - the board's eating my formatting - but I've made it so it stays accurate.)
Anyhow, drawn that way, you can see it looks pretty good. You have one narrow chain, with narrow terminators on each end. The terminator in the Yamaha is probably active; I wouldn't worry about that.
The 58-to-60 adapter creates one small stub/'tee' electrically, but it's supposed to; you can't help that. It only becomes a big deal when you try to wire an entire chain with adaptor stubs on each drive, as when some people try to use 7 SCA drives with adaptors rather than a backplane. It's like a dip in a road; cars are built to handle them, you shouldn't even notice one, but cover the street with them and you might spill your coffee! (Stubs create a few added reflections, and maybe a little impedance mismatch. The terminators are designed to 'absorb' that - the connectors on the cable and on the drives are already small stubs themselves. It's when you overload things - creating a lot of longer, weird stubs, by using a lot of adaptors on each drive, or doing something silly like trying to split the cable with a Y-adaptor - sort of like trying to drive a car 'around' a tree - that your shock absorbers give out!)
There's no rule for how many adapters you can use; it's just that each one adds a little more risk. If you ever add a second or third wide drive, *then* I'd worry about getting a single high-byte terminator and a regular wide cable:
[Wide terminator in wide drive]
[Wide drive]
|| <- Wide (two 8-bit channels) cable.
[Wide drive]
||
[Wide drive]
||
V <- HD68F-to-IDC50M high-byte-terminating adaptor
| <- Regular 50-pin narrow cable
[Narrow CD-RW]
|
[Narrow CD-ROM]
|
[Host controller]
[Narrow terminator in host controller]
...as you can see, that doesn't create *any* added stubs, and direct transfers between the wide drives might execute with full 16-bit widths.
Thanks again for all your useful answers.
So.. do you think this setup is donde correctly or should I remove the passive tertrmination jumper from the cdrw?
Looks beautiful. One improvement could be to move the wide drive to the *end* of the chain, with its terminator on (and taking off the terminator on the Yamaha, once it moves to the middle of the chain) - but since Fujitsu were nice enough to give you that "force narrow" jumper, something I didn't have on the IBMs, chances are the drive is terminating its unused lines properly anyway -- like I've said, it shouldn't really matter, because they're unused!
So: "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." -- But it won't hurt to keep a printout of this thread around, so you know what to try if you ever have trouble.