Thanks to everyone for the suggestions. I seem to have moved the SCSI
Ids around and dropped the transfer rate and it appears to work great.
Thanks again!
Rob
> Andrew Weiss wrote:
>
> ID of 0 is usually reserved for a boot drive in many SCSI bios'es.
> Don't use 0 with a CDROM. Make that har
drive/another CD etc)
> >
> > Have you considered setting the scsi ID to something like 2
> through 5? the card is often ID6.
> >
> > Can you please post the dmesg lines from boot that show what
> scsi devices are detected?
> >
> > --
> > Fr
What do you mean "added the burner to the SCSI bus later"? You can't do
that, can you? I mean, it has to be connected and on in order to be
detected and used, doesn't it? The SCSI bus should be terminated
correctly. the 50-pin connector is terminated by the DVD drive, and the
UW chain (the HDs)
Have you added your burner to the SCSI bus, later? Then check, wether your
SCSI bus is terminated correctly. The device at the end of the cable must be
terminated, only. For some burners you have to set the jumper to disable
termination. That is revers to normal harddrive setting.
m: Rob Rati[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Reply To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, 23 May 2000 5:23 PM
> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject:SCSI bus reset when burning
>
> My scsi bus appears to want to reset everytime I try to burn a CD. My
>
devices are
detected?
--
From: Rob Rati[SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, 23 May 2000 5:23 PM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject:SCSI bus reset when burning
My scsi bus appears to want to reset everytime I try to burn a CD. My
My scsi bus appears to want to reset everytime I try to burn a CD. My
dmesg log gets errors like this:
scsi : aborting command due to timeout : pid 232511, scsi0, channel 0,
id 0, lun 0 0x2a 00 00 00 2f e0 00 00 10 00
(scsi0:0:0:0) Synchronous at 10.0 Mbyte/sec, offset 15.
scsi : aborting comman
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