I'm afraid not all SCSI controllers use the same Integrated Circuit controller chips nor the same firmware. This exists outside the Amiga world to that of the PC and Mac. Others in this forum have different hardware, and might be able to pin down your issue. But there are two reasons to accept that you cannot use your Mercury SSD on your A3000D and your Warp Engine: an SSD is overkill for the Amiga, the speed doesn't matter because the interface will always limit it, CF cards are just as quiet and cheaper, and the amount of storage is more than any Amiga setup will ever use. Secondly, the Amiga is a 20+ year old machine and very few other 20+ year old computers can still keep up with what the Amiga can still handle at her age: USB, Internet/Web access, PCI graphic cards, and others.
Find a good use for your hardware and try to enjoy it. Many people just trash old computers and move on.
Thanks for the nice advice... I already use my Amiga for many functions and enjoy it...
I agree with the overkill, but anything except CF will be overkill for my amiga. I had a quantum atlas 10k drive, not because it was overkill but because I could buy it brand new and it would provide years of trouble free operation. The atlas lastest for 10 years and was on for most of it's life and most importantly gave the most speed that my controller could handle...
I have old scsi drive lying around but they are all 20 years old and are bound to be problems many of than give almost 8mb/second for throughput but I don't want headaches.
The only reason I didn't go with CF is that they can't give me 8mb/s and I enjoy the speed of the WE SCSI. If anyone can point me to CF that gives that kind of speed, I will give it a try.
To you last point I must agree, this device seems to have broken the SCSI standard. I will contact the manufacturer to see what might be done. This is the first time in history that I have every found the scsi standard broken. Goes to show what a great standard it is...
I will try locating older sata drives to see if they can be detect on the scsi bus, but I have a feeling that even a incompatible drive would still be listed with a scsi inquiry...
Regards,