Upgrading and Repairing PCs Free Open Book

Upgrading and Repairing PCs

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SCSI Cable and Connector Pinouts

The following section details the pinouts of the various SCSI cables and connectors. Two electrically different versions of SCSI exist: single-ended and differential. These two versions are electrically incompatible and must not be interconnected; otherwise, damage will result. Fortunately, very few differential SCSI applications are available in the PC industry, so you will rarely (if ever) encounter one. Within each electrical type (single-ended or differential), there are basically two SCSI cable types:

  • A cable (Standard 8-bit SCSI)

  • P cable (16-bit Wide SCSI)

The 50-pin A-cable is used in most SCSI-1 and SCSI-2 installations and is the most common cable you will encounter. SCSI-2 Wide (16-bit) applications use a P cable instead, which has 68 pins. You can intermix standard and Wide SCSI devices on a single SCSI bus by interconnecting A and P cables with special adapters. SCSI-3 applications that are 32-bit wide would have used an additional Q cable, but this was finally dropped from the SCSI-3 standard after it was never implemented in actual products.

SCSI cables are specially shielded with the most important high-speed signals carried in the center of the cable and less important, slower ones in two additional layers around the perimeter. A typical SCSI cable is constructed as shown in Figure 8.12.

Figure 8.12. Cross section of a typical SCSI cable.

graphics/08fig12.jpg

This specialized construction is what makes SCSI cables so expensive, as well as thicker than other types of cables. Note this specialized construction is necessary only for external SCSI cables. Cables used to connect devices inside a shielded enclosure (such as inside a PC) can use much less expensive ribbon cables.

The A cables can have pin-header–type (internal) connectors or external shielded connectors, each with a different pinout. The P cables feature the same connector pinout on either internal or external cable connections.

Single-Ended SCSI Cables and Connectors

The single-ended electrical interface is the most popular type for PC systems. Tables 8.3 and 8.4 show all the possible single-ended cable and connector pinouts. The A cable is available in both internal unshielded and external shielded configurations. A hyphen preceding a signal name indicates the signal is Active Low. The RESERVED lines have continuity from one end of the SCSI bus to the other. In an A cable bus, the RESERVED lines should be left open in SCSI devices (but may be connected to ground) and are connected to ground in the bus terminator assemblies. In the P and Q cables, the RESERVED lines are left open in SCSI devices and the bus terminator assemblies.

Table 8.3. A-Cable (Single-Ended) Internal Unshielded Header Connector

Signal

Pin

Pin

Signal

GROUND

1

2

-DB(0)

GROUND

3

4

-DB(1)

GROUND

5

6

-DB(2)

GROUND

7

8

-DB(3)

GROUND

9

10

-DB(4)

GROUND

11

12

-DB(5)

GROUND

13

14

-DB(6)

GROUND

15

16

-DB(7)

GROUND

17

18

-DB(Parity)

GROUND

19

20

GROUND

GROUND

21

22

GROUND

RESERVED

23

24

RESERVED

Open

25

26

TERMPWR

RESERVED

27

28

RESERVED

GROUND

29

30

GROUND

GROUND

31

32

-ATN

GROUND

33

34

GROUND

GROUND

35

36

-BSY

GROUND

37

38

-ACK

GROUND

39

40

-RST

GROUND

41

42

-MSG

GROUND

43

44

-SEL

GROUND

45

46

-C/D

GROUND

47

48

-REQ

GROUND

49

50

-I/O

Table 8.4. A-Cable (Single-Ended) External Shielded Connector

Signal

Pin

Pin

Signal

GROUND

1

26

-DB(0)

GROUND

2

27

-DB(1)

GROUND

3

28

-DB(2)

GROUND

4

29

-DB(3)

GROUND

5

30

-DB(4)

GROUND

6

31

-DB(5)

GROUND

7

32

-DB(6)

GROUND

8

33

-DB(7)

GROUND

9

34

-DB(Parity)

GROUND

10

35

GROUND

GROUND

11

36

GROUND

RESERVED

12

37

RESERVED

Open

13

38

TERMPWR

RESERVED

14

39

RESERVED

GROUND

15

40

GROUND

GROUND

16

41

-ATN

GROUND

17

42

GROUND

GROUND

18

43

-BSY

GROUND

19

44

-ACK

GROUND

20

45

-RST

GROUND

21

46

-MSG

GROUND

22

47

-SEL

GROUND

23

48

-C/D

GROUND

24

49

-REQ

GROUND

25

50

-I/O

IBM used the SCSI interface in virtually all PS/2 systems introduced after 1990. These systems use a Micro-Channel SCSI adapter or have the SCSI Host Adapter built in to the motherboard. In either case, IBM's SCSI interface uses a special 60-pin, mini-Centronics–type external shielded connector that is unique in the industry. A special IBM cable is required to adapt this connector to the standard 50-pin Centronics-style connector used on most external SCSI devices. The pinout of the IBM 60-pin, mini-Centronics–style external shielded connector is shown in Table 8.5. Notice that although the pin arrangement is unique, the pin-number–to–signal designations correspond with the standard unshielded internal pin header type of SCSI connector. IBM has discontinued this design in all its systems because after the PS/2 series, all have used conventional SCSI connectors.

The P cable (single-ended) and connectors are used in 16-bit Wide SCSI-2 applications (see Table 8.6 for the pinout).

Table 8.5. IBM PS/2 SCSI External

Signal Name

Pin

Pin

Signal Name

GROUND

1

60

Not Connected

-DB(0)

2

59

Not Connected

GROUND

3

58

Not Connected

-DB(1)

4

57

Not Connected

GROUND

5

56

Not Connected

-DB(2)

6

55

Not Connected

GROUND

7

54

Not Connected

-DB(3)

8

53

Not Connected

GROUND

9

52

Not Connected

-DB(4)

10

51

GROUND

GROUND

11

50

-I/O

-DB(5)

12

49

GROUND

GROUND

13

48

-REQ

-DB(6)

14

47

GROUND

GROUND

15

46

-C/D

-DB(7)

16

45

GROUND

GROUND

17

44

-SEL

-DB(Parity)

18

43

GROUND

GROUND

19

42

-MSG

GROUND

20

41

GROUND

GROUND

21

40

-RST

GROUND

22

39

GROUND

RESERVED

23

38

-ACK

RESERVED

24

37

GROUND

Open

25

36

-BSY

TERMPWR

26

35

GROUND

RESERVED

27

34

GROUND

RESERVED

28

33

GROUND

GROUND

29

32

-ATN

GROUND

30

31

GROUND

Table 8.6. P-Cable (Single-Ended) Internal or External Shielded Connector

Signal Name

Pin

Pin

Signal Name

GROUND

1

35

-DB(12)

GROUND

2

36

-DB(13)

GROUND

3

37

-DB(14)

GROUND

4

38

-DB(15)

GROUND

5

39

-DB(Parity 1)

GROUND

6

40

-DB(0)

GROUND

7

41

-DB(1)

GROUND

8

42

-DB(2)

GROUND

9

43

-DB(3)

GROUND

10

44

-DB(4)

GROUND

11

45

-DB(5)

GROUND

12

46

-DB(6)

GROUND

13

47

-DB(7)

GROUND

14

48

-DB(Parity 0)

GROUND

15

49

GROUND

GROUND

16

50

GROUND

TERMPWR

17

51

TERMPWR

TERMPWR

18

52

TERMPWR

RESERVED

19

53

RESERVED

GROUND

20

54

GROUND

GROUND

21

55

-ATN

GROUND

22

56

GROUND

GROUND

23

57

-BSY

GROUND

24

58

-ACK

GROUND

25

59

-RST

GROUND

26

60

-MSG

GROUND

27

61

-SEL

GROUND

28

62

-C/D

GROUND

29

63

-REQ

GROUND

30

64

-I/O

GROUND

31

65

-DB(8)

GROUND

32

66

-DB(9)

GROUND

33

67

-DB(10)

GROUND

34

68

-DB(11)

High Voltage Differential SCSI Signals

High Voltage Differential SCSI is not normally used in a PC environment but is very popular with minicomputer installations because of the very long bus lengths that are allowed. This has changed with the introduction of Low Voltage Differential signaling for SCSI, bringing the benefits of differential signaling to lower-end and more mainstream SCSI products.

Differential signaling uses drivers on both the initiator and target ends of the bus and makes each signal work in a push/pull arrangement, rather than a signal/ground arrangement as with standard single-ended SCSI. This enables much greater cable lengths and eliminates some of the problems with termination.

Almost all PC peripherals produced since the beginning of SCSI have been SE types. These are incompatible with HVD devices, although HVD devices can be used on an SE bus with appropriate (and expensive) adapters. The LVD devices, on the other hand, can be used on an SE bus if they are multimode devices, in which case they switch into SE mode. If all devices—including the host adapter—support LVD mode, all the devices switch into that mode and much longer cable lengths and higher speeds can be used. The normal limit for an SE SCSI bus is 1.53 meters maximum (about 5–10 feet) and up to 20MHz. If run in LVD mode, the maximum bus length goes up to 12 meters (about 40 feet) and speeds can go up to 80MHz. HVD SCSI supports bus lengths of up to 25 meters (about 80 feet).

Note that almost all modern SCSI hard disks are Ultra2 or Ultra3 devices, which means by default they are also LVD or multimode LVD/SE devices.

Expanders

SCSI expanders separate a SCSI bus into more than one physical segment, each of which can have the full SCSI cable length for that type of signaling. They provide a complete regeneration of the SCSI bus signals, allowing greater cable lengths and incompatible devices to essentially share the same bus. An expander also can be used to separate incompatible parts of a SCSI bus—for example, to keep SE and HVD SCSI devices in separate domains.

Expanders are transparent to the software and firmware on the bus, and they don't take up a device ID. They are usually capable of providing termination if located at the end of a bus segment, or they can have termination disabled if they are in the middle of a bus segment.

Because of their expense, expanders are not normally used except in extreme situations in which no other alternative remains. In most cases, it is better to stick within the recommended cable and bus length requirements and keep incompatible devices, such as HVD devices, off a standard SE or LVD bus.

Termination

Because a SCSI bus carries high-speed electrical signals, it can be affected by electrical reflections that might occur within any transmission line system. A terminator is designed to minimize the potential for reflections or noise on the bus, as well as to create the proper load for the bus transmitter circuits. Terminators are placed at each end of the bus to minimize these problems.

Despite the simple rules that only two terminators must be on the bus and they must be at each end, I still see improper termination as the most common cause of problems in SCSI installations.

Several types of SCSI terminators are available, dependent on the bus signaling and speed requirements:

  • Passive

  • Active (also called Alternative 2)

  • Forced Perfect Termination (FPT): FPT-3, FPT-18, and FPT-27

  • HVD termination

  • LVD termination

The first three are used on single-ended SCSI buses only. Passive terminators use a passive network of 220-ohm and 330-ohm resistors to control bus termination. They should be used only in narrow (8-bit) SCSI buses running at 5MHz. Passive terminators allow signal fluctuations in relation to the terminator power signal on the bus. Usually, passive terminating resistors suffice over short distances, such as 2 or 3 feet, but for longer distances or higher speeds, active termination is a real advantage. Active termination is required with Fast SCSI.

Figure 8.13 shows the schematic of a typical passive terminator.

Figure 8.13. Passive SCSI terminator schematic.

graphics/08fig13.gif

Passive terminators can be plugged in to the unused SCSI port or be built in to many low-speed SCSI devices such as scanners, optical drives, and removable-media drives. On such devices, you can activate or deactivate built-in passive termination with jumper blocks, a toggle switch, or some other form of selector switch—depending on the device.

Active terminators use built-in voltage regulator ICs combined with 110-ohm resistors. An active terminator actually has one or more voltage regulators to produce the termination voltage, rather than resistor voltage dividers alone. This arrangement helps ensure that the SCSI signals always are terminated to the correct voltage level. Active terminators often have some type of LED indicating the termination activity. The SCSI-2 specification recommends active termination on both ends of the bus and requires active termination whenever Fast or Wide SCSI devices are used. Most high-performance host adapters have an "auto-termination" feature, so if it is the end of a chain, it terminates itself. Figure 8.14 shows a typical active terminator.

Figure 8.14. Active SCSI terminator schematic.

graphics/08fig14.gif

A variation on active termination is available for single-ended buses: forced perfect termination (FPT). Forced perfect termination is an even better form of active termination in which diode clamps are added to eliminate signal overshoot and undershoot. The trick is that instead of clamping to +5 and ground, these terminators clamp to the output of two regulated voltages. This arrangement enables the clamping diodes to eliminate signal overshoot and undershoot, especially at higher signaling speeds and over longer distances. Forced perfect termination is technically not found in the SCSI specifications but is the superior type of termination for single-ended applications that experience high levels of electrical noise. Figure 8.15 shows the schematic of a typical FPT-18 type terminator (18 lines forced perfect, designed for 50-pin connections).

Figure 8.15. FPT SCSI terminator schematic.

graphics/08fig15.gif

FPT terminators are available in several versions. FPT-3 and FPT-18 versions are available for 8-bit standard SCSI, whereas the FPT-27 is available for 16-bit (Wide) SCSI. The FPT-3 version forces perfect the three most highly active SCSI signals on the 8-bit SCSI bus, whereas the FPT-18 forces perfect all the SCSI signals on the 8-bit bus except grounds. FPT-27 also forces perfect all the 16-bit Wide SCSI signals except grounds.

HVD buses require HVD terminators, constructed using a passive network of 330-ohm/150-ohm/330-ohm resistors. The only choice is that the terminator matches your cable or device connection.

The same is true for Low Voltage Differential buses. They require LVD terminators for the bus to function properly. One twist is that special LVD/SE (active) multimode terminators are available. These function as LVD types on an LVD bus and as active types on an SE bus. Note that if any SE devices are on the bus, it functions in SE mode and never uses LVD mode, severely limiting bus length and performance. If any SE-only terminators or SE devices are on the bus, the bus defaults into SE mode.

Note

Several companies make high-quality terminators for the SCSI bus, including Aeronics and the Data Mate division of Methode. Both companies make a variety of terminators. Aeronics is well noted for some unique FPT versions that are especially suited to problem configurations that require longer cable runs or higher signal integrity. One of the best investments you can make in any SCSI installation is in high-quality cables and terminators. Contact information for both of these companies is in the Vendor List on the DVD.

Special terminators also are required for LVD and HVD SCSI, so if you are using those interfaces, be sure your terminators are compatible.

With LVD or HVD buses, you don't have much choice in terminator types, but for single-ended buses, you have at least three choices.

Tip

The best rule for terminators, as well as for cables, is to get the best you can. My recommendation is to never use passive terminators; instead, use active or, if you want the best in reliability and integrity, use only FPT.

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         Main Menu
    Main Page
    Table of content
    Copyright
    About the Author
    Acknowledgments
    Introduction
    Chapter 1. Development of the PC
    Chapter 2. PC Components, Features, and System Design
    Chapter 3. Microprocessor Types and Specifications
    Chapter 4. Motherboards and Buses
    Chapter 5. BIOS
    Chapter 6. Memory
    Chapter 7. The ATA/IDE Interface
    Chapter 8. The SCSI Interface
    Small Computer System Interface
    ANSI SCSI Standards
    SCSI-1
    SCSI-2
    SCSI-3
    SCSI Cables and Connectors
    SCSI Cable and Connector Pinouts
    SCSI Drive Configuration
    Plug and Play SCSI
    SCSI Configuration Troubleshooting
    SCSI Versus ATA (IDE)
    Chapter 9. Magnetic Storage Principles
    Chapter 10. Hard Disk Storage
    Chapter 11. Floppy Disk Storage
    Chapter 12. High-Capacity Removable Storage
    Chapter 13. Optical Storage
    Chapter 14. Physical Drive Installation and Configuration
    Chapter 15. Video Hardware
    Chapter 16. Audio Hardware
    Chapter 17. I/O Interfaces from Serial and Parallel to IEEE-1394 and USB
    Chapter 18. Input Devices
    Chapter 19. Internet Connectivity
    Chapter 20. Local Area Networking
    Chapter 21. Power Supply and Chassis/Case
    Chapter 22. Building or Upgrading Systems
    Chapter 23. PC Diagnostics, Testing, and Maintenance
    Chapter 24. File Systems and Data Recovery
    Appendix A. Glossary
    Appendix B. Key Vendor Contact Information
    Appendix C. Troubleshooting Index
    List of Acronyms and Abbreviations
    Index


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