Thanks to the several folks who replied, and the obligatory mention to the persons from Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, and Texas Instruments for their "I'm on vacation and you're not!" replies. Honorary mention to John Whelan and his weird send-me-another-mail anti-spam tool called STEVEN. Everyone was in consensus, but Darren Dunham's reply was the most verbose: "HVD is a completely different voltage setup than SE or LVD. You cannot cross any equipment between the two other than cables. "The HVD terminator is different. "Most LVD equipment will "throttle-back" to SE speeds and length requirements if SE equipment is used on the bus. "A D1000 requires an HVD controller, proper cables, and an HVD terminator. Most sun terminators for this equipment say simply "differential". At the time they were most popular, Sun sold no LVD equipment, so the possibility for confusion arises. Thanks Darren! I also found a few descriptions on the web that served useful from http://scsifaq.parlan.com: Q. 11. What is HVD SCSI? Answer: This is the "old" differential SCSI using TTL voltage levels that was originally defined in SCSI-2, offering 25 meter (82 ft) cable length. It was functionally replaced by LVD (Low Voltage Differential) SCSI in the SPI-2 document of SCSI-3 and obsoleted in the SPI-3 document of SCSI-3. HVD and LVD SCSI are not directly compatible but can be interconnected by the use of a SCSI expander called an LVD to HVD Converter. Q. 13. What is LVD SCSI? Answer: LVD, which stands for Low Voltage Differential, was introduced in the SPI-2 document of SCSI-3. It is also called Ultra 2 or Fast-40 SCSI. It uses 3 volt instead of 5 volt logic level and is not directly compatible with the "old" differential (HVD) SCSI. LVD again doubles SCSI data throughput to 40 Megatransfers/sec. Cable lengths are 12 m (40 ft). Single initiator-single target applications may use up to 25 m (82 ft) of cable. The "multimode" implementation of LVD is backward compatible with single-ended SCSI. However, connecting one single-ended peripheral to a multimode LVD bus will cause the entire bus to switch to the single-ended mode with the single-ended limitations on data throughput and cable length. LVD can be interconnected with HVD by the use of a SCSI expander called an LVD to HVD Converter. Thanks again! jdg -----Original Message----- From: Jon Godfrey [mailto:Jon.Godfrey@primus.com] Sent: Wednesday, February 11, 2004 9:07 AM To: sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org Subject: [Maybe Spam] Differential Terminators: HVD or LVD? Is there a difference in terminator requirements as it relates to a D1000? Are there specific types of differential terminators, or does the HVD and LVD only refer to the chain type leaving just un-typed differential terminators? thanks jdg _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagers _______________________________________________ sunmanagers mailing list sunmanagers@sunmanagers.org http://www.sunmanagers.org/mailman/listinfo/sunmanagersReceived on Wed Feb 11 13:08:35 2004
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