Adaptec Powerdomain 39160 Ultra160 Scsi Pci For Mac

Eigenschaften und Vorteile Features and Benefits Accelerate Performance with the Fastest Technology Accelerate high-throughput web servers and demanding video, prepress and desktop publishing applications with blindingly fast I/O. The PowerDomain 39160 accelerator has a combined data transfer rate of 320 MB/sec across two independent Ultra160 SCSI channels, making it significantly faster than gigabit Fibre Channel. The 64-bit PCI interface increases throughput on the PCI bus, avoiding data flow congestion. Advanced features free the CPU for other tasks, cutting response times and boosting productivity. No Compromises.

The PowerDomain 39160 accelerator has been designed for maximum configuration flexibility and ease-of-use. Ultra160/m SCSI technology is compatible with Ultra2, Ultra Wide and all other previous-generation SCSI devices. The card fits both 32-bit and 64-bit PCI slots, providing G3 rev. B and newer and G4 users an upgrade path to the PowerDomain 39160 accelerator. Connect Up To 30 SCSI Peripherals Using two independent Ultra160 SCSI buses, the PowerDomain 39160 accelerator enables you to connect a combination of 30 devices to your Macintosh®, including today's most advanced Ultra160/m SCSI hard drives. Its two 68-pin Ultra160/m SCSI very high-density external connectors allow you to connect your fastest drives and arrays externally. Install with Plug-and-Play Ease Install the PowerDomain 39160 accelerator in seconds!

No jumpers or switches to set, no drivers to install. Just plug the card into an available PCI slot and power up. The included PowerDomain Control utility enables you to customize your SCSI settings for maximum system performance and flexibility.

Enjoy Highest Quality and Broadest Compatibility The PowerDomain 39160 accelerator has been thoroughly engineered and tested to deliver the greatest reliability and compatibility available. As the industry-leading manufacturer of SCSI accelerators, Adaptec assures the widest possible compatibility now and in the future. Trust Adaptec-The World's #1 Choice For SCSI Cards Adaptec is the industry standard in SCSI Cards. And all Adaptec SCSI Cards are backed by a 5-year warranty. Paketinhalt. Adaptec 39160 Accelerator. 5-position Ultra 160/m SCSI internal cable with terminator.

Mac

3-position Ultra narrow internal cable. SCSIProbe (Mac OS 8.6 or 9.x only). PowerDomain Control software (Mac OS 8.6 or 9.x only). SoftRAID (Mac OS 8.6 or 9.x only).

Complete documentation. Warranty card Garantie 5-year manufacturing and materials warranty Supported Protocols SCSI-1 SCSI-2 SCSI-3 (Ultra) Ultra SCSI Ultra2 SCSI Advanced Features Multithreaded I/O (up to 255 tasks simultaneously) Scatter/gather Tagged command queuing Board Dimensions 4'W x 7'L.

Quote: Originally posted by DarylF2: It's hooked up to my PC now via an Adaptec 29160 (not the 29160N) Ultra160 SCSI card. The VXA-1 is the only device attached to this card.

Can I use this card with my Mac (a new dual 1.0 GHz G4 DDR), or must I buy a Mac-specific SCSI card (i.e. The Adaptec PowerDomain 29160)? I'd rather not have to buy another SCSI card, as the 29160 was expensive! Since 10.0 with drivers from Adaptec. Drivers for that card are included with Jaguar so it works out of the box.

You just can't boot from it. Quote: Originally posted by DarylF2: I'd like to move my Ecrix VXA-1 tape drive to my Mac, but I don't have a SCSI card for my Mac. The VXA-1 is picky and needs a GOOD quality SCSI card. It's hooked up to my PC now via an Adaptec 29160 (not the 29160N) Ultra160 SCSI card. The VXA-1 is the only device attached to this card. Can I use this card with my Mac (a new dual 1.0 GHz G4 DDR), or must I buy a Mac-specific SCSI card (i.e.

39160

The Adaptec PowerDomain 29160)? I'd rather not have to buy another SCSI card, as the 29160 was expensive! For around US$40 you can get the (OEM) Atto dual channel U2 160 card.

How much time do you want to potentially waste dicking with your Adaptec? The Atto is a great card for a Mac, and at US$40 you really can't go wrong. Quote: Originally posted by tobyglyn: For around US$40 you can get the (OEM) Atto dual channel U2 160 card. How much time do you want to potentially waste dicking with your Adaptec? The Atto is a great card for a Mac, and at US$40 you really can't go wrong. None of the UL2 cards from ATTO are officially supported by ATTO under Mac OS X.

However, I did buy one of these and it does ID correctly under X.1.5. I have not bought my VXA-2 drive to connect to it yet (Dantz is dragging their feet with a full featured driver,) so I cannot yet say if it functions properly under X.

It would not be a big deal for me if it didn't, since I will be using it under OS 9. Quote: Originally posted by jahamasa: None of the UL2 cards from ATTO are officially supported by ATTO under Mac OS X. However, I did buy one of these and it does ID correctly under X.1.5. I have not bought my VXA-2 drive to connect to it yet (Dantz is dragging their feet with a full featured driver,) so I cannot yet say if it functions properly under X. It would not be a big deal for me if it didn't, since I will be using it under OS 9. Jack While this is a little disconcerting, I'm still happy with the order because OWC claims it will work with all versions on OS X and they offer a 90-day warranty. I've dealt with OWC in the past and have always been pleased with them.

I'll let you all know how it works with my new MDD dual-1.0GHz G4 DDR and my VXA-1 SCSI tape drive. Well I installed the ATTO UL2D card, and it shows up in the Apple System Profiler.

It shows up twice though. Both instances show up in PCI slot 3, which is the slot holding the card. In once instance for channel A and other other for channel B? I can't hook up my VXA-1 drive right now, as its busy backing up my PC. I should get a chance to try it out this weekend. I'm jealous about you're getting a VXA-2, jahamasa!

Those are amazing. I may get one when the full Mac Retrospect 5 drivers are released for them, since it will nearly double the storage capacity of my existing eight V17 tapes (the VXA-1 stores 33/66 GB per V17; the VXA-2 stores 59/118 GB per V17)!!! Quote: Originally posted by ADDRAGYN: So this OWC card and a 15k.3 would make a nice X boot drive, right? Well, The UL2D is not officially supported under OS X. Since ATTO has updated the firmware for current cards to version 1.66, I am wondering if any changes are due to 10.2.x. Since the UL2D card is not current, its firmware updater seems to be EOL at 1.64.

If anyone has hacked the updater to apply 1.66 to a UL2D, I'd like to hear about the results. Regardless, the UL2D is an Ultra2 device with a theoretical maximum transfer rate of 80MB/sec.

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Per channel (I guess you can get a '160' number by adding the two channels together ) and the Seagate 15K.3 is an Ultra320 device with a theoretical maximum transfer rate of 320MB/sec. However, storagereview.com says the sustained transfer rate of the 15K.3 ranged from 76.4MB/sec. To 51.1MB/sec. When they tested the drive with a Ultra160 host adapter, staying under the Ultra2 ceiling, so it might be worth the cost of the drive. If I had my way, I would get a UL3D or a UL4D and two 15K.3 drives and see how they perform as a RAID, but I am way too cheap for that. I bought a Western Digital WDE9150-0040 Ultra2 LVD SCSI 10K RPM hard drive for $30 from MacResQ. Who knows what the transfer rate is on that.

Is there a good benchmark I can run from OS X to test the SCSI chains? I installed OS X.1.5 on the internal ATA drive and I still have the old Adaptec-Seagate SCSI chain in the machine. I would like to test the two SCSI chains to compare the performance. Any suggestions?

Ultra160

Quote: I'm jealous about you're getting a VXA-2, jahamasa! Those are amazing. I may get one when the full Mac Retrospect 5 drivers are released for them, since it will nearly double the storage capacity of my existing eight V17 tapes (the VXA-1 stores 33/66 GB per V17; the VXA-2 stores 59/118 GB per V17)!!! When I was digging around for a suitable backup solution, the VXA-2 was announced, so I decided to wait. Now I have to put it off due to an unexpected eMac purchase. Don't be jealous of backing up 60+ GB to CD-R!

Adaptec Powerdomain 39160 Ultra160 Scsi Pci For Mac Mac

Dantz says the VXA-2 driver works now, but in order to get the full capacity of your VXA tapes, you will have to reformat them in the VXA-2 drive.