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HP Ultrium Tape Drive User Manual

Page 37

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Single-Ended and Low Voltage Differential SCSI

These terms define how the signals are transmitted along the cable.

With single-ended (SE) SCSI, each signal travels over a single wire and each

signal’s value is determined by comparing the signal to a paired ground wire.

Signal quality tends to decrease over longer cable lengths or at increased signal

speed.

With low voltage differential (LVD) signaling, signals travel along two wires and

the difference in voltage between the wire pairs determines the signal value. This

enables faster data rates and longer cabling with less susceptibility to noise than

SE signaling and reduced power consumption.

Narrow and Wide, Fast, Ultra and Ultra2 SCSI

Narrow SCSI devices can transfer data one byte at-a-time (and are sometimes

called “8-bit SCSI” devices). They can conform to either the SCSI-2 or SCSI-3

protocols. They have a 50-pin connection to the SCSI bus.

Wide SCSI devices can transfer two bytes of data simultaneously (“16-bit SCSI”).

They usually have a single, 68-pin connection to the SCSI bus. (This physical

arrangement is part of the SCSI-3 specification.) They may support either SCSI-2 or

SCSI-3 protocols. Wide and narrow devices can simultaneously be connected to

the same bus without problem, provided certain rules are followed.

Fast SCSI can transfer data at up to 10 MB/sec, using a cable of up to 6 meters

total length.

Ultra SCSI can transfer data at up to 20 MB/sec, but the cable length cannot

exceed 3 meters (it is also known as “Fast20”).

Ultra2 SCSI can transfer data at up to 80 MB/sec, using a cable of up to 12

meters.

Ultra160 SCSI can transfer data at up to 160 MB/sec, using a cable of up to 12

meters.

Ultra320 SCSI can transfer data at up to 320 MB/sec, using a cable of up to 12

meters.

Ultra SCSI supports both SE and LVD interfaces. Although Ultra2 SCSI and above

can support SE devices, this is not recommended as the whole bus is slowed to

Ultra speeds; instead, use LVD devices only.

HP’s Ultrium drives are Ultra-320 compatible devices. They should be used only on

LVD host bus adapters for maximum performance.