Optical disk for a unix-pc, is it possible?
Bruce Becker
bdb at becker.UUCP
Fri Dec 1 01:07:34 AEST 1989
In article <1037 at icus.islp.ny.us> lenny at icus.islp.ny.us (Lenny Tropiano) writes:
|[...]
|The CD optical disk would have to be ST-506/MFM compatible. If it's not,
|then you can pretty much forget it. When and *if* the 3B1 ever sees a
|SCSI interface, those opportunities will open right up. Most likely
|the CD technology quoted here was for the 3B2 SCSI products. I'd pretty
|much impossible to get 650MB using MFM recording.
It's not impossible, but noone does it - RLL &
similar encodings are generally used for large
capacity magnetic drives.
The 3B1 problem is addressability - 8 heads,
1024 cylinders, 16 sectors/track, 1 drive. At
512 bytes/sector, the total is 67,108,864 bytes.
If a WD2010 controller is used, then one can
use up to 2048 cylinders, for 134,217,728
bytes, though I've never seen a ST506/MFM
drive with that many cylinders.
If the P5.1 upgrade is done, then 16 heads
are addressable, for 268,435,456 bytes.
With this upgrade it is also possible to
have 2 drives, but the total maximum possible
is still less that 650MB.
The most that seems available are drives
like the Maxtor 2190, with 1224 cylinders
& 15 heads, giving 150,405,120 bytes/drive.
SCSI, SCSI, SCSI, if I say it enough times
will it magically appear? 8^)
Cheers,
--
^^ Bruce Becker Toronto, Ont.
w \**/ Internet: bdb at becker.UUCP, bruce at gpu.utcs.toronto.edu
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