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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 08-14-2005, 01:50 PM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

Hi,



I have a Seagate ST336607LW SCSI hard drive where I've installed my Linux
(FC3) & windoze root partitions. It is a 68 pin HD with no internal
termination. My scsi controller is an SIIG AP-20 PCI adapter (50 pin with
internal auto-termination). I connected my scsi card to my scsi hard drive
as follows:




50 pin ribbon
50-pin card---------------->50-pin terminator-->50-68 pin adapter-->SCSI
Drive



The hdd is on a dedicated connection to the power supply (no other devices
chained to it along that power cable).



Occasionally , irrespective of whether I'm on windoze or linux, the hdd
makes a sickening "click" sound, shuts down (I can hear it) and spins up
again. My entire compu freezes & I have to hard-reset.

I checked the cable connections & they seem pretty tight, so I'm rather
confused as to what's up. Is the termination bad? IS the HD overheating
(it's typically at around 50 deg celcuis, & the operating limit is 54 deg,
I'm getting an extra case fan that should cool it down further)? Is there
something wrong with the controller? Is the hard drive itself busted (no
badblocks or anything like that, and I ran Seagate's diagnostics on the HD
and there were no errors).

Where should I start in trying to diagnose the problem? DO I require
special hardware?

Bear in mind that there are no syslog error messages in linux as syslog
can't write to the HD when it shuts down, so...


I would appreciate ANY advice offered on this matter.

Regards,
AR








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  #2 (permalink)  
Old 08-14-2005, 03:23 PM
philo
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

Analabha Roy wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
>
> I have a Seagate ST336607LW SCSI hard drive where I've installed my Linux
> (FC3) & windoze root partitions. It is a 68 pin HD with no internal
> termination. My scsi controller is an SIIG AP-20 PCI adapter (50 pin with
> internal auto-termination). I connected my scsi card to my scsi hard drive
> as follows:
>
>
>
>
> 50 pin ribbon
> 50-pin card---------------->50-pin terminator-->50-68 pin adapter-->SCSI
> Drive
>
>
>
> The hdd is on a dedicated connection to the power supply (no other devices
> chained to it along that power cable).
>
>
>
> Occasionally , irrespective of whether I'm on windoze or linux, the hdd
> makes a sickening "click" sound, shuts down (I can hear it) and spins up
> again. My entire compu freezes & I have to hard-reset.
>
> I checked the cable connections & they seem pretty tight, so I'm rather
> confused as to what's up. Is the termination bad? IS the HD overheating
> (it's typically at around 50 deg celcuis, & the operating limit is 54 deg,
> I'm getting an extra case fan that should cool it down further)? Is there
> something wrong with the controller? Is the hard drive itself busted (no
> badblocks or anything like that, and I ran Seagate's diagnostics on the HD
> and there were no errors).


<snip>

though the drive could be bad...
i'd try another cable.

if you have another scsi drive you could try that in the machine
to eliminate any possible controller problem

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  #3 (permalink)  
Old 08-14-2005, 04:37 PM
Free Hui
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

I have experienced a similar case as yours. I have two 50GB Seagate hds in
my system controlled by AHA2940UW2. The solution was to use another Power
supply. My original Power supply is a Generic 450W. I did not know if my
case is applicable to yours. However, it is worthy of a try.
F. Hui

"Analabha Roy" <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote in message
news:ddni89$f8h$1@geraldo.cc.utexas.edu...
> Hi,
>
>
>
> I have a Seagate ST336607LW SCSI hard drive where I've installed my Linux
> (FC3) & windoze root partitions. It is a 68 pin HD with no internal
> termination. My scsi controller is an SIIG AP-20 PCI adapter (50 pin with
> internal auto-termination). I connected my scsi card to my scsi hard drive
> as follows:
>
>
>
>
> 50 pin ribbon
> 50-pin card---------------->50-pin terminator-->50-68 pin adapter-->SCSI
> Drive
>
>
>
> The hdd is on a dedicated connection to the power supply (no other devices
> chained to it along that power cable).
>
>
>
> Occasionally , irrespective of whether I'm on windoze or linux, the hdd
> makes a sickening "click" sound, shuts down (I can hear it) and spins up
> again. My entire compu freezes & I have to hard-reset.
>
> I checked the cable connections & they seem pretty tight, so I'm rather
> confused as to what's up. Is the termination bad? IS the HD overheating
> (it's typically at around 50 deg celcuis, & the operating limit is 54 deg,
> I'm getting an extra case fan that should cool it down further)? Is there
> something wrong with the controller? Is the hard drive itself busted (no
> badblocks or anything like that, and I ran Seagate's diagnostics on the HD
> and there were no errors).
>
> Where should I start in trying to diagnose the problem? DO I require
> special hardware?
>
> Bear in mind that there are no syslog error messages in linux as syslog
> can't write to the HD when it shuts down, so...
>
>
> I would appreciate ANY advice offered on this matter.
>
> Regards,
> AR
>
>
>
>
>
>
>




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  #4 (permalink)  
Old 08-15-2005, 01:17 AM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

philo wrote:

> Analabha Roy wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>>
>>
>> I have a Seagate ST336607LW SCSI hard drive where I've installed my
>> Linux
>> (FC3) & windoze root partitions. It is a 68 pin HD with no internal
>> termination. My scsi controller is an SIIG AP-20 PCI adapter (50 pin with
>> internal auto-termination). I connected my scsi card to my scsi hard
>> drive as follows:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> 50 pin ribbon
>> 50-pin card---------------->50-pin terminator-->50-68 pin adapter-->SCSI
>> Drive
>>
>>
>>
>> The hdd is on a dedicated connection to the power supply (no other
>> devices
>> chained to it along that power cable).
>>
>>
>>
>> Occasionally , irrespective of whether I'm on windoze or linux, the hdd
>> makes a sickening "click" sound, shuts down (I can hear it) and spins up
>> again. My entire compu freezes & I have to hard-reset.
>>
>> I checked the cable connections & they seem pretty tight, so I'm rather
>> confused as to what's up. Is the termination bad? IS the HD overheating
>> (it's typically at around 50 deg celcuis, & the operating limit is 54
>> deg, I'm getting an extra case fan that should cool it down further)? Is
>> there something wrong with the controller? Is the hard drive itself
>> busted (no badblocks or anything like that, and I ran Seagate's
>> diagnostics on the HD and there were no errors).

>
> <snip>
>
> though the drive could be bad...
> i'd try another cable.


Power, ribbon or both?


>
> if you have another scsi drive you could try that in the machine
> to eliminate any possible controller problem



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  #5 (permalink)  
Old 08-15-2005, 01:36 AM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

Free Hui wrote:

> I have experienced a similar case as yours. I have two 50GB Seagate hds in
> my system controlled by AHA2940UW2. The solution was to use another Power
> supply. My original Power supply is a Generic 450W. I did not know if my
> case is applicable to yours. However, it is worthy of a try.
> F. Hui





My power supply is a generic 250 W (specs here:
http://support.gateway.com/s/PC/310_...00788sp6.shtml)

I have the following devices connected to the power supply

1. mobo (obviously heh)
2. 2 weak but quiet Case fans
3. cpu with heatsink and a fan on that
4. IDE hard drive (7200 rpm)
5. The SCSI HDD (10,000 rpm)
6. DVD burner/CD burner/DVD ROM combo drive



What is the best wattage for this type of configuration?

Please throw me a bone here.

Regards,

AR














>
> "Analabha Roy" <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote in message
> news:ddni89$f8h$1@geraldo.cc.utexas.edu...
>> Hi,
>>
>>
>>
>> I have a Seagate ST336607LW SCSI hard drive where I've installed my Linux
>> (FC3) & windoze root partitions. It is a 68 pin HD with no internal
>> termination. My scsi controller is an SIIG AP-20 PCI adapter (50 pin with
>> internal auto-termination). I connected my scsi card to my scsi hard
>> drive as follows:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> 50 pin ribbon
>> 50-pin card---------------->50-pin terminator-->50-68 pin adapter-->SCSI
>> Drive
>>
>>
>>
>> The hdd is on a dedicated connection to the power supply (no other
>> devices chained to it along that power cable).
>>
>>
>>
>> Occasionally , irrespective of whether I'm on windoze or linux, the hdd
>> makes a sickening "click" sound, shuts down (I can hear it) and spins up
>> again. My entire compu freezes & I have to hard-reset.
>>
>> I checked the cable connections & they seem pretty tight, so I'm rather
>> confused as to what's up. Is the termination bad? IS the HD overheating
>> (it's typically at around 50 deg celcuis, & the operating limit is 54
>> deg, I'm getting an extra case fan that should cool it down further)? Is
>> there something wrong with the controller? Is the hard drive itself
>> busted (no badblocks or anything like that, and I ran Seagate's
>> diagnostics on the HD and there were no errors).
>>
>> Where should I start in trying to diagnose the problem? DO I require
>> special hardware?
>>
>> Bear in mind that there are no syslog error messages in linux as syslog
>> can't write to the HD when it shuts down, so...
>>
>>
>> I would appreciate ANY advice offered on this matter.
>>
>> Regards,
>> AR
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>



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  #6 (permalink)  
Old 08-15-2005, 06:05 PM
John Smith
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

Here is a calculator for power supply wattage requirements.
http://www.jscustompcs.com/power_supply/
I didn't run your config but be sure to include SCSI adapter and video card.

Analabha Roy wrote:

> Free Hui wrote:
>
> > I have experienced a similar case as yours. I have two 50GB Seagate hds in
> > my system controlled by AHA2940UW2. The solution was to use another Power
> > supply. My original Power supply is a Generic 450W. I did not know if my
> > case is applicable to yours. However, it is worthy of a try.
> > F. Hui

>
> My power supply is a generic 250 W (specs here:
> http://support.gateway.com/s/PC/310_...00788sp6.shtml)
>
> I have the following devices connected to the power supply
>
> 1. mobo (obviously heh)
> 2. 2 weak but quiet Case fans
> 3. cpu with heatsink and a fan on that
> 4. IDE hard drive (7200 rpm)
> 5. The SCSI HDD (10,000 rpm)
> 6. DVD burner/CD burner/DVD ROM combo drive
>
> What is the best wattage for this type of configuration?
>
> Please throw me a bone here.
>
> Regards,
>
> AR
>
> >
> > "Analabha Roy" <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote in message
> > news:ddni89$f8h$1@geraldo.cc.utexas.edu...
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> I have a Seagate ST336607LW SCSI hard drive where I've installed my Linux
> >> (FC3) & windoze root partitions. It is a 68 pin HD with no internal
> >> termination. My scsi controller is an SIIG AP-20 PCI adapter (50 pin with
> >> internal auto-termination). I connected my scsi card to my scsi hard
> >> drive as follows:
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> 50 pin ribbon
> >> 50-pin card---------------->50-pin terminator-->50-68 pin adapter-->SCSI
> >> Drive
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> The hdd is on a dedicated connection to the power supply (no other
> >> devices chained to it along that power cable).
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >> Occasionally , irrespective of whether I'm on windoze or linux, the hdd
> >> makes a sickening "click" sound, shuts down (I can hear it) and spins up
> >> again. My entire compu freezes & I have to hard-reset.
> >>
> >> I checked the cable connections & they seem pretty tight, so I'm rather
> >> confused as to what's up. Is the termination bad? IS the HD overheating
> >> (it's typically at around 50 deg celcuis, & the operating limit is 54
> >> deg, I'm getting an extra case fan that should cool it down further)? Is
> >> there something wrong with the controller? Is the hard drive itself
> >> busted (no badblocks or anything like that, and I ran Seagate's
> >> diagnostics on the HD and there were no errors).
> >>
> >> Where should I start in trying to diagnose the problem? DO I require
> >> special hardware?
> >>
> >> Bear in mind that there are no syslog error messages in linux as syslog
> >> can't write to the HD when it shuts down, so...
> >>
> >>
> >> I would appreciate ANY advice offered on this matter.
> >>
> >> Regards,
> >> AR
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>



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  #7 (permalink)  
Old 08-15-2005, 11:13 PM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts


Thanks for the info. I bought the following 400 Watt power supply from
newegg:

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16817159043

The antec ones are like 3 times the price. This one was the cheapest. Don't
know how much of a difference that makes. I hope that the transformer
doesn't fall off after 2 days :).





John Smith wrote:

> Here is a calculator for power supply wattage requirements.
> http://www.jscustompcs.com/power_supply/
> I didn't run your config but be sure to include SCSI adapter and video
> card.
>
> Analabha Roy wrote:
>
>> Free Hui wrote:
>>
>> > I have experienced a similar case as yours. I have two 50GB Seagate hds
>> > in my system controlled by AHA2940UW2. The solution was to use another
>> > Power supply. My original Power supply is a Generic 450W. I did not
>> > know if my case is applicable to yours. However, it is worthy of a try.
>> > F. Hui

>>
>> My power supply is a generic 250 W (specs here:
>>

http://support.gateway.com/s/PC/310_...00788sp6.shtml)
>>
>> I have the following devices connected to the power supply
>>
>> 1. mobo (obviously heh)
>> 2. 2 weak but quiet Case fans
>> 3. cpu with heatsink and a fan on that
>> 4. IDE hard drive (7200 rpm)
>> 5. The SCSI HDD (10,000 rpm)
>> 6. DVD burner/CD burner/DVD ROM combo drive
>>
>> What is the best wattage for this type of configuration?
>>
>> Please throw me a bone here.
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> AR
>>
>> >
>> > "Analabha Roy" <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote in message
>> > news:ddni89$f8h$1@geraldo.cc.utexas.edu...
>> >> Hi,
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> I have a Seagate ST336607LW SCSI hard drive where I've installed my
>> >> Linux (FC3) & windoze root partitions. It is a 68 pin HD with no
>> >> internal termination. My scsi controller is an SIIG AP-20 PCI adapter
>> >> (50 pin with internal auto-termination). I connected my scsi card to
>> >> my scsi hard drive as follows:
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> 50 pin ribbon
>> >> 50-pin card---------------->50-pin terminator-->50-68 pin
>> >> adapter-->SCSI Drive
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> The hdd is on a dedicated connection to the power supply (no other
>> >> devices chained to it along that power cable).
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> Occasionally , irrespective of whether I'm on windoze or linux, the
>> >> hdd makes a sickening "click" sound, shuts down (I can hear it) and
>> >> spins up again. My entire compu freezes & I have to hard-reset.
>> >>
>> >> I checked the cable connections & they seem pretty tight, so I'm
>> >> rather confused as to what's up. Is the termination bad? IS the HD
>> >> overheating (it's typically at around 50 deg celcuis, & the operating
>> >> limit is 54 deg, I'm getting an extra case fan that should cool it
>> >> down further)? Is there something wrong with the controller? Is the
>> >> hard drive itself busted (no badblocks or anything like that, and I
>> >> ran Seagate's diagnostics on the HD and there were no errors).
>> >>
>> >> Where should I start in trying to diagnose the problem? DO I require
>> >> special hardware?
>> >>
>> >> Bear in mind that there are no syslog error messages in linux as
>> >> syslog can't write to the HD when it shuts down, so...
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> I would appreciate ANY advice offered on this matter.
>> >>
>> >> Regards,
>> >> AR
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>



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  #8 (permalink)  
Old 08-16-2005, 03:45 AM
kony
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

On Mon, 15 Aug 2005 18:13:37 -0500, Analabha Roy
<daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:

>
> Thanks for the info. I bought the following 400 Watt power supply from
>newegg:
>
>http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16817159043
>
> The antec ones are like 3 times the price. This one was the cheapest. Don't
>know how much of a difference that makes. I hope that the transformer
>doesn't fall off after 2 days :).



The difference it makes is that you didn't get a "real" 400W
PSU, you got a 250W PSU with a (arguably fradulent) 400W
label slapped on it.

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  #9 (permalink)  
Old 08-16-2005, 01:47 PM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

kony wrote:

> On Mon, 15 Aug 2005 18:13:37 -0500, Analabha Roy
> <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:
>
>>
>> Thanks for the info. I bought the following 400 Watt power supply from
>>newegg:
>>
>>http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16817159043
>>
>> The antec ones are like 3 times the price. This one was the cheapest.
>> Don't
>>know how much of a difference that makes. I hope that the transformer
>>doesn't fall off after 2 days :).

>
>
> The difference it makes is that you didn't get a "real" 400W
> PSU, you got a 250W PSU with a (arguably fradulent) 400W
> label slapped on it.



Whoa! Newegg would sell stuff like that???

That's a bit hard to believe from a cool vendor like Newegg.

If your serious, then how do I test the actual power rating (newegg RMA's,
of course)?

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  #10 (permalink)  
Old 08-16-2005, 01:52 PM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts


Can anybody say anything about that with these specs?

http://www.coolmaxusa.com/productDet...ategory=single



Analabha Roy wrote:

> kony wrote:
>
>> On Mon, 15 Aug 2005 18:13:37 -0500, Analabha Roy
>> <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Thanks for the info. I bought the following 400 Watt power supply from
>>>newegg:
>>>
>>>http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16817159043
>>>
>>> The antec ones are like 3 times the price. This one was the cheapest.
>>> Don't
>>>know how much of a difference that makes. I hope that the transformer
>>>doesn't fall off after 2 days :).

>>
>>
>> The difference it makes is that you didn't get a "real" 400W
>> PSU, you got a 250W PSU with a (arguably fradulent) 400W
>> label slapped on it.

>
>
> Whoa! Newegg would sell stuff like that???
>
> That's a bit hard to believe from a cool vendor like Newegg.
>
> If your serious, then how do I test the actual power rating (newegg
> RMA's,
> of course)?









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  #11 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2005, 12:31 AM
Bennett Price
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

First thing to do is make absolutely sure that the power connector to
the drive is good. While it may be hard to pull off, that still allows
a conductor to be loose. Use another power connector (not power supply)
if one is available and/or squeeze the individual sockets with a long
nose pliers. Sometimes the springy steel in the connectors isn't
sufficiently springy and as things heat up and cool down contact is
lost. I doubt very much that the problem is in the adapter, the scsi
cable, or the terminator


Analabha Roy wrote:
> Hi,
>
>
>
> I have a Seagate ST336607LW SCSI hard drive where I've installed my Linux
> (FC3) & windoze root partitions. It is a 68 pin HD with no internal
> termination. My scsi controller is an SIIG AP-20 PCI adapter (50 pin with
> internal auto-termination). I connected my scsi card to my scsi hard drive
> as follows:
>
>
>
>
> 50 pin ribbon
> 50-pin card---------------->50-pin terminator-->50-68 pin adapter-->SCSI
> Drive
>
>
>
> The hdd is on a dedicated connection to the power supply (no other devices
> chained to it along that power cable).
>
>
>
> Occasionally , irrespective of whether I'm on windoze or linux, the hdd
> makes a sickening "click" sound, shuts down (I can hear it) and spins up
> again. My entire compu freezes & I have to hard-reset.
>
> I checked the cable connections & they seem pretty tight, so I'm rather
> confused as to what's up. Is the termination bad? IS the HD overheating
> (it's typically at around 50 deg celcuis, & the operating limit is 54 deg,
> I'm getting an extra case fan that should cool it down further)? Is there
> something wrong with the controller? Is the hard drive itself busted (no
> badblocks or anything like that, and I ran Seagate's diagnostics on the HD
> and there were no errors).
>
> Where should I start in trying to diagnose the problem? DO I require
> special hardware?
>
> Bear in mind that there are no syslog error messages in linux as syslog
> can't write to the HD when it shuts down, so...
>
>
> I would appreciate ANY advice offered on this matter.
>
> Regards,
> AR
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


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  #12 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2005, 04:55 AM
kony
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

On Tue, 16 Aug 2005 08:47:29 -0500, Analabha Roy
<daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:


>> The difference it makes is that you didn't get a "real" 400W
>> PSU, you got a 250W PSU with a (arguably fradulent) 400W
>> label slapped on it.

>
>
>Whoa! Newegg would sell stuff like that???
>


Newegg sells whatever people buy, it's a business.


>That's a bit hard to believe from a cool vendor like Newegg.
>
> If your serious, then how do I test the actual power rating (newegg RMA's,
>of course)?


Set up capacitive / resistive loads on each rail, hook up a
scope and a few multimeters, vary the load rapidly like
modern CPUs/GPUs/etc do, and run some tests for a few
months, recording voltages, recovery time, ripple, etc.
Then test shutdown thresholds like overcurrent, overvoltage,
overheat, fan lifespan and response... There is no way you
can do a simple "it's good long-term" type of qualification
for it in a day or two.

Put simply, you won't get the same PSU for $20 as for $60
unless you happened to find some rare OEM closeout surplus
something-or-other, which is not a normal stock retail
purchase. It's certainly not necessary to have cable
sheaths, LEDs, glowing neon or any of the eyecandy to cut
costs a few dollars but PSU are commodity items and one
can't just spend 1/2 as much and expect there weren't
significant corners cut on a generic.




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  #13 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2005, 04:56 AM
kony
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

On Tue, 16 Aug 2005 08:52:47 -0500, Analabha Roy
<daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:

>
> Can anybody say anything about that with these specs?
>
>http://www.coolmaxusa.com/productDet...ategory=single
>
>


That they're peak ratings, not sustainable. Essentially
they use questinable methods to determine those numbers and
if other name-brand manufacturers used similar methods,
their "400W" psu would be rated higher than 400W.

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  #14 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2005, 10:38 AM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

kony wrote:

> On Tue, 16 Aug 2005 08:47:29 -0500, Analabha Roy
> <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:
>
>
>>> The difference it makes is that you didn't get a "real" 400W
>>> PSU, you got a 250W PSU with a (arguably fradulent) 400W
>>> label slapped on it.

>>
>>
>>Whoa! Newegg would sell stuff like that???
>>

>
> Newegg sells whatever people buy, it's a business.
>
>
>>That's a bit hard to believe from a cool vendor like Newegg.
>>
>> If your serious, then how do I test the actual power rating (newegg
>> RMA's,
>>of course)?

>
> Set up capacitive / resistive loads on each rail,



How? do I get a breadboard, put some resistors and capacitors in them, and
use that? How will I be able to connect that with the power port of the
PSU? Do i have to unscrew and remove the chassis or something?




> hook up a
> scope and a few multimeters, vary the load rapidly like
> modern CPUs/GPUs/etc do, and run some tests for a few
> months, recording voltages, recovery time, ripple, etc.
> Then test shutdown thresholds like overcurrent, overvoltage,
> overheat, fan lifespan and response... There is no way you
> can do a simple "it's good long-term" type of qualification
> for it in a day or two.


But isn't it possible to just verify the maximum power threshhold of the PSU
without too much testing?




>
> Put simply, you won't get the same PSU for $20 as for $60
> unless you happened to find some rare OEM closeout surplus
> something-or-other, which is not a normal stock retail
> purchase. It's certainly not necessary to have cable
> sheaths, LEDs, glowing neon or any of the eyecandy to cut
> costs a few dollars but PSU are commodity items and one
> can't just spend 1/2 as much and expect there weren't
> significant corners cut on a generic.



Reply With Quote
  #15 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2005, 10:46 AM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

kony wrote:

> On Tue, 16 Aug 2005 08:52:47 -0500, Analabha Roy
> <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:
>
>>
>> Can anybody say anything about that with these specs?
>>
>>http://www.coolmaxusa.com/productDet...ategory=single
>>
>>

>
> That they're peak ratings, not sustainable. Essentially
> they use questinable methods to determine those numbers and
> if other name-brand manufacturers used similar methods,
> their "400W" psu would be rated higher than 400W.



That's a good point I guess...

But what is a psu exactly? Isn't it just a step-down transformer with some
pots in it to regulate voltage? I mean, it doesn't actually supply any
power, right? That comes from the mains. The 'sustainability' would have to
be more dependent on material properties (if the impedance changes too much
as it gets hotter and if subsequent cooling reverses the trend)like
resilience and stuff. If that is true, then the only manufacturing
difference between a high power and low power psu is in the materials that
make the magnetic core, maybe the CPM of the fan, the # of coils in the
transformer and other similar such. Those should be individually measurable
and benchmarkable, and there should be documentation on the web about ideal
parameters and one should be able to compare them.

Let me know what you think. Also, if you do know of some urls where they
have additional info, I'd be interested in reading it.


Thx,
AR


Reply With Quote
  #16 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2005, 10:53 AM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

Bennett Price wrote:

> First thing to do is make absolutely sure that the power connector to
> the drive is good. While it may be hard to pull off, that still allows
> a conductor to be loose. Use another power connector (not power supply)
> if one is available and/or squeeze the individual sockets with a long
> nose pliers. Sometimes the springy steel in the connectors isn't
> sufficiently springy and as things heat up and cool down contact is
> lost. I doubt very much that the problem is in the adapter, the scsi
> cable, or the terminator
>



Thanks for the info. It seems a bit odd that the connector would be loose
only for the scsi drive and not for all the other devices. Are SCSI hdds
specially sensitive to power fluctuations that may result from marginally
loose connectors? I did tighten the connectors with pliers, though I was
afraid to apply too much strength as I could damage the drive physically
(I'm too poor to risk that, the bloody hdd cost $150 even as an OEM). How
shock-and-shear resistant are these things anyway? I looked at the
published values, but since I don't know how much force I am applying
(exactly in kgwt or pounds or whatever), they don't help much.





>
> Analabha Roy wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>>
>>
>> I have a Seagate ST336607LW SCSI hard drive where I've installed my
>> Linux
>> (FC3) & windoze root partitions. It is a 68 pin HD with no internal
>> termination. My scsi controller is an SIIG AP-20 PCI adapter (50 pin with
>> internal auto-termination). I connected my scsi card to my scsi hard
>> drive as follows:
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> 50 pin ribbon
>> 50-pin card---------------->50-pin terminator-->50-68 pin adapter-->SCSI
>> Drive
>>
>>
>>
>> The hdd is on a dedicated connection to the power supply (no other
>> devices
>> chained to it along that power cable).
>>
>>
>>
>> Occasionally , irrespective of whether I'm on windoze or linux, the hdd
>> makes a sickening "click" sound, shuts down (I can hear it) and spins up
>> again. My entire compu freezes & I have to hard-reset.
>>
>> I checked the cable connections & they seem pretty tight, so I'm rather
>> confused as to what's up. Is the termination bad? IS the HD overheating
>> (it's typically at around 50 deg celcuis, & the operating limit is 54
>> deg, I'm getting an extra case fan that should cool it down further)? Is
>> there something wrong with the controller? Is the hard drive itself
>> busted (no badblocks or anything like that, and I ran Seagate's
>> diagnostics on the HD and there were no errors).
>>
>> Where should I start in trying to diagnose the problem? DO I require
>> special hardware?
>>
>> Bear in mind that there are no syslog error messages in linux as syslog
>> can't write to the HD when it shuts down, so...
>>
>>
>> I would appreciate ANY advice offered on this matter.
>>
>> Regards,
>> AR
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>



Reply With Quote
  #17 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2005, 01:59 PM
kony
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

On Wed, 17 Aug 2005 05:38:32 -0500, Analabha Roy
<daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:


>> Set up capacitive / resistive loads on each rail,

>
>
> How? do I get a breadboard, put some resistors and capacitors in them, and
>use that? How will I be able to connect that with the power port of the
>PSU? Do i have to unscrew and remove the chassis or something?


It'd have to be quite a hefty "breadboard", considering that
the load would require 400W heat dissipation... put in
perspective, you would need several very large heatsinked
resistors, a heat transfer plate, and fairly high velocity
fans, or an oil bath... whatever your chosen method of
dispersing the heat. As for the capacitance you'll need,
rought guess would be a 10,000 mfd per rail (varies per
system, that might be a rather conservative figure for a
system actually using anywhere near 400W which in itself is
hard to do with a PC, but more importantly some systems may
actually use the majority of the 12V rail.

How to connect to the power port? Buy the mating molex
connectors. Setting up a testbed isnt' the kind of thing
one can usually do with bits in their spare parts bin,
unless they have a pretty generous stock of parts. You do
not need to open the power supply at all, unless you also
wanted to measure temps.

Frankly all of this is a waste of time, as opening the PSU
probably voids the warranty then you can't return it.
Testing until it fails is also a bit of a loss, really only
useful to quality fhe design for larger scale deployment
over many systems.


>> hook up a
>> scope and a few multimeters, vary the load rapidly like
>> modern CPUs/GPUs/etc do, and run some tests for a few
>> months, recording voltages, recovery time, ripple, etc.
>> Then test shutdown thresholds like overcurrent, overvoltage,
>> overheat, fan lifespan and response... There is no way you
>> can do a simple "it's good long-term" type of qualification
>> for it in a day or two.

>
>But isn't it possible to just verify the maximum power threshhold of the PSU
>without too much testing?


No, you could get a peak sustainable value that's useful to
the extent that you know if the rails would drop with that
degree of system load, but it won't tell you if there's
potential for damage from massive ripple, won't tell you
what the PSU does in a fault scenario, and doesn't tell you
how long it will run at that output level. Even a poor PSU
may put out 300W for a day, maybe even weeks to months.
That's the worst scenario, because then after the warranty
is up it may fail, or even if warranty remains you generally
aren't covered for any OTHER parts that could be damaged.


Look at it another way- if there was no significant drawback
then how would the other manufacturers stay in business
selling them for far more when they all (until recently)
just looked like boring grey metal boxes?

Reply With Quote
  #18 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2005, 02:16 PM
kony
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

On Wed, 17 Aug 2005 05:46:43 -0500, Analabha Roy
<daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:

>kony wrote:
>
>> On Tue, 16 Aug 2005 08:52:47 -0500, Analabha Roy
>> <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Can anybody say anything about that with these specs?
>>>
>>>http://www.coolmaxusa.com/productDet...ategory=single
>>>
>>>

>>
>> That they're peak ratings, not sustainable. Essentially
>> they use questinable methods to determine those numbers and
>> if other name-brand manufacturers used similar methods,
>> their "400W" psu would be rated higher than 400W.

>
>
> That's a good point I guess...
>
> But what is a psu exactly? Isn't it just a step-down transformer with some
>pots in it to regulate voltage?


Not exactly it swithces HV across a transformer at high
frequency with a duration or rate controlled by (a
controller, to regulate the voltage through at least one or
multiple feedbacks) into rectification diodes and (typically
inductive and capacitive) filters...

That's an oversimplification and ignores complimentary
circuits like the shutdown, fan control, 5VSB, and more,
but thinking "it's simple therefore should be cheap" isn't
true, as any kind of electronic components have tolerances,
values, and more or less elaborate designs including the
filtering and lifespan. There are a few PSU schematics
scattered over the web, Google may find some. Unfortunately
those I've seen are rather simple schematics, more typical
of low end PSU that decent ones.

I'd return the PSU you bought, but you might pop open some
old generic and compare it to a decent PSU. WIthout more
experneice in switching PSU you may not realize the
significance of all of the differences but even an untrained
eye can spot a lot of difference between two "supposedly"
400W PSU, one good and one not.

>I mean, it doesn't actually supply any
>power, right? That comes from the mains.


You might be trying to overthink the definition of supply,
and should see it within the context of an electronic
device... within that context, it is suitably called a
"power supply".


>The 'sustainability' would have to
>be more dependent on material properties (if the impedance changes too much
>as it gets hotter and if subsequent cooling reverses the trend)like
>resilience and stuff. If that is true, then the only manufacturing
>difference between a high power and low power psu is in the materials that
>make the magnetic core, maybe the CPM of the fan, the # of coils in the
>transformer and other similar such. Those should be individually measurable
>and benchmarkable, and there should be documentation on the web about ideal
>parameters and one should be able to compare them.


Yes the parameters can be physically compared, though again
you're oversimplifing. You have a good point about the core
though, the size of the transfomer is indeed "one" of the
common differences between a properly rated and a misrated
PSU, and/or the construction of the core, whether it be a
ferric composite material or old school laminate type. If
you dig deep enough you will find that budget grade (junk)
PSU cut corners in many, many ways. You will notice more
similar build in a generic 400W and a name-brand 250W than a
generic 400W and a name-brand 350W.



>
> Let me know what you think. Also, if you do know of some urls where they
>have additional info, I'd be interested in reading it.



I would first suggest some background reading, either on
switching power supplies in general or if necessary, even
more basic like electronics in general. It's not the kind
of think I can condense into a few usenet posts and I don't
know of any website that does so either, as you first need
the requisite background on power, electronics, SMPS,
computer power demands, then to tie it all together in
context plus survey enough power supplies (including failure
modes of dead ones) to get a better picture.



Reply With Quote
  #19 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2005, 07:08 PM
Bennett Price
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

If the floppy or tape drive or whatever cuts in and out, your PC won't
lock up. You should be tightening the female connectors connected to
the PS, not the males on the HD (but perhaps that is what you did and
I misunderstood what you said.) I suggest again that you try a
connector on a different cable in the PS; it may be that there is a bad
solder joint in the PS on the wires you are using.

It wouldn't hurt to reseat the SCSI adapter if you haven't already done
that.

Analabha Roy wrote:

> Bennett Price wrote:
>
>
>>First thing to do is make absolutely sure that the power connector to
>>the drive is good. While it may be hard to pull off, that still allows
>>a conductor to be loose. Use another power connector (not power supply)
>>if one is available and/or squeeze the individual sockets with a long
>>nose pliers. Sometimes the springy steel in the connectors isn't
>>sufficiently springy and as things heat up and cool down contact is
>>lost. I doubt very much that the problem is in the adapter, the scsi
>>cable, or the terminator
>>

>
>
>
> Thanks for the info. It seems a bit odd that the connector would be loose
> only for the scsi drive and not for all the other devices. Are SCSI hdds
> specially sensitive to power fluctuations that may result from marginally
> loose connectors? I did tighten the connectors with pliers, though I was
> afraid to apply too much strength as I could damage the drive physically
> (I'm too poor to risk that, the bloody hdd cost $150 even as an OEM). How
> shock-and-shear resistant are these things anyway? I looked at the
> published values, but since I don't know how much force I am applying
> (exactly in kgwt or pounds or whatever), they don't help much.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>>Analabha Roy wrote:
>>
>>>Hi,
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> I have a Seagate ST336607LW SCSI hard drive where I've installed my
>>> Linux
>>>(FC3) & windoze root partitions. It is a 68 pin HD with no internal
>>>termination. My scsi controller is an SIIG AP-20 PCI adapter (50 pin with
>>>internal auto-termination). I connected my scsi card to my scsi hard
>>>drive as follows:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> 50 pin ribbon
>>>50-pin card---------------->50-pin terminator-->50-68 pin adapter-->SCSI
>>>Drive
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> The hdd is on a dedicated connection to the power supply (no other
>>> devices
>>>chained to it along that power cable).
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>Occasionally , irrespective of whether I'm on windoze or linux, the hdd
>>>makes a sickening "click" sound, shuts down (I can hear it) and spins up
>>>again. My entire compu freezes & I have to hard-reset.
>>>
>>> I checked the cable connections & they seem pretty tight, so I'm rather
>>>confused as to what's up. Is the termination bad? IS the HD overheating
>>>(it's typically at around 50 deg celcuis, & the operating limit is 54
>>>deg, I'm getting an extra case fan that should cool it down further)? Is
>>>there something wrong with the controller? Is the hard drive itself
>>>busted (no badblocks or anything like that, and I ran Seagate's
>>>diagnostics on the HD and there were no errors).
>>>
>>> Where should I start in trying to diagnose the problem? DO I require
>>>special hardware?
>>>
>>> Bear in mind that there are no syslog error messages in linux as syslog
>>>can't write to the HD when it shuts down, so...
>>>
>>>
>>> I would appreciate ANY advice offered on this matter.
>>>
>>>Regards,
>>>AR
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>

>
>


Reply With Quote
  #20 (permalink)  
Old 08-18-2005, 01:45 AM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

kony wrote:

> On Wed, 17 Aug 2005 05:46:43 -0500, Analabha Roy
> <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:
>
>>kony wrote:
>>
>>> On Tue, 16 Aug 2005 08:52:47 -0500, Analabha Roy
>>> <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>> Can anybody say anything about that with these specs?
>>>>
>>>>http://www.coolmaxusa.com/productDet...ategory=single
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>> That they're peak ratings, not sustainable. Essentially
>>> they use questinable methods to determine those numbers and
>>> if other name-brand manufacturers used similar methods,
>>> their "400W" psu would be rated higher than 400W.

>>
>>
>> That's a good point I guess...
>>
>> But what is a psu exactly? Isn't it just a step-down transformer with
>> some
>>pots in it to regulate voltage?

>
> Not exactly it swithces HV across a transformer at high
> frequency with a duration or rate controlled by (a
> controller, to regulate the voltage through at least one or
> multiple feedbacks) into rectification diodes and (typically
> inductive and capacitive) filters...
>



Oh, so an AC/DC Converter. Right.
Thanks for the info. I"ll look it up and dust off my old undergrad
electricity/electronics textbooks.

> That's an oversimplification and ignores complimentary
> circuits like the shutdown, fan control, 5VSB, and more,
> but thinking "it's simple therefore should be cheap" isn't
> true, as any kind of electronic components have tolerances,
> values, and more or less elaborate designs including the
> filtering and lifespan. There are a few PSU schematics
> scattered over the web, Google may find some. Unfortunately
> those I've seen are rather simple schematics, more typical
> of low end PSU that decent ones.
>
> I'd return the PSU you bought, but you might pop open some
> old generic and compare it to a decent PSU. WIthout more
> experneice in switching PSU you may not realize the
> significance of all of the differences but even an untrained
> eye can spot a lot of difference between two "supposedly"
> 400W PSU, one good and one not.
>
>>I mean, it doesn't actually supply any
>>power, right? That comes from the mains.

>
> You might be trying to overthink the definition of supply,
> and should see it within the context of an electronic
> device... within that context, it is suitably called a
> "power supply".
>
>
>>The 'sustainability' would have to
>>be more dependent on material properties (if the impedance changes too
>>much as it gets hotter and if subsequent cooling reverses the trend)like
>>resilience and stuff. If that is true, then the only manufacturing
>>difference between a high power and low power psu is in the materials that
>>make the magnetic core, maybe the CPM of the fan, the # of coils in the
>>transformer and other similar such. Those should be individually
>>measurable and benchmarkable, and there should be documentation on the web
>>about ideal parameters and one should be able to compare them.

>
> Yes the parameters can be physically compared, though again
> you're oversimplifing. You have a good point about the core
> though, the size of the transfomer is indeed "one" of the
> common differences between a properly rated and a misrated
> PSU, and/or the construction of the core, whether it be a
> ferric composite material or old school laminate type. If
> you dig deep enough you will find that budget grade (junk)
> PSU cut corners in many, many ways. You will notice more
> similar build in a generic 400W and a name-brand 250W than a
> generic 400W and a name-brand 350W.
>
>
>
>>
>> Let me know what you think. Also, if you do know of some urls where they
>>have additional info, I'd be interested in reading it.

>
>
> I would first suggest some background reading, either on
> switching power supplies in general or if necessary, even
> more basic like electronics in general. It's not the kind
> of think I can condense into a few usenet posts and I don't
> know of any website that does so either, as you first need
> the requisite background on power, electronics, SMPS,
> computer power demands, then to tie it all together in
> context plus survey enough power supplies (including failure
> modes of dead ones) to get a better picture.



Reply With Quote
  #21 (permalink)  
Old 08-18-2005, 05:06 PM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts


OK, I've been sufficiently frightened to buy a ridiculously expensive $80
PSU which I got this morning at FRY's. This one:

http://www.antec.com/us/productDetai...?ProdID=26500#



Hope it was worth it.


Analabha

Analabha Roy wrote:

> kony wrote:
>
>> On Wed, 17 Aug 2005 05:46:43 -0500, Analabha Roy
>> <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:
>>
>>>kony wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Tue, 16 Aug 2005 08:52:47 -0500, Analabha Roy
>>>> <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Can anybody say anything about that with these specs?
>>>>>
>>>>>http://www.coolmaxusa.com/productDet...ategory=single
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> That they're peak ratings, not sustainable. Essentially
>>>> they use questinable methods to determine those numbers and
>>>> if other name-brand manufacturers used similar methods,
>>>> their "400W" psu would be rated higher than 400W.
>>>
>>>
>>> That's a good point I guess...
>>>
>>> But what is a psu exactly? Isn't it just a step-down transformer with
>>> some
>>>pots in it to regulate voltage?

>>
>> Not exactly it swithces HV across a transformer at high
>> frequency with a duration or rate controlled by (a
>> controller, to regulate the voltage through at least one or
>> multiple feedbacks) into rectification diodes and (typically
>> inductive and capacitive) filters...
>>

>
>
> Oh, so an AC/DC Converter. Right.
> Thanks for the info. I"ll look it up and dust off my old undergrad
> electricity/electronics textbooks.
>
>> That's an oversimplification and ignores complimentary
>> circuits like the shutdown, fan control, 5VSB, and more,
>> but thinking "it's simple therefore should be cheap" isn't
>> true, as any kind of electronic components have tolerances,
>> values, and more or less elaborate designs including the
>> filtering and lifespan. There are a few PSU schematics
>> scattered over the web, Google may find some. Unfortunately
>> those I've seen are rather simple schematics, more typical
>> of low end PSU that decent ones.
>>
>> I'd return the PSU you bought, but you might pop open some
>> old generic and compare it to a decent PSU. WIthout more
>> experneice in switching PSU you may not realize the
>> significance of all of the differences but even an untrained
>> eye can spot a lot of difference between two "supposedly"
>> 400W PSU, one good and one not.
>>
>>>I mean, it doesn't actually supply any
>>>power, right? That comes from the mains.

>>
>> You might be trying to overthink the definition of supply,
>> and should see it within the context of an electronic
>> device... within that context, it is suitably called a
>> "power supply".
>>
>>
>>>The 'sustainability' would have to
>>>be more dependent on material properties (if the impedance changes too
>>>much as it gets hotter and if subsequent cooling reverses the trend)like
>>>resilience and stuff. If that is true, then the only manufacturing
>>>difference between a high power and low power psu is in the materials
>>>that make the magnetic core, maybe the CPM of the fan, the # of coils in
>>>the transformer and other similar such. Those should be individually
>>>measurable and benchmarkable, and there should be documentation on the
>>>web about ideal parameters and one should be able to compare them.

>>
>> Yes the parameters can be physically compared, though again
>> you're oversimplifing. You have a good point about the core
>> though, the size of the transfomer is indeed "one" of the
>> common differences between a properly rated and a misrated
>> PSU, and/or the construction of the core, whether it be a
>> ferric composite material or old school laminate type. If
>> you dig deep enough you will find that budget grade (junk)
>> PSU cut corners in many, many ways. You will notice more
>> similar build in a generic 400W and a name-brand 250W than a
>> generic 400W and a name-brand 350W.
>>
>>
>>
>>>
>>> Let me know what you think. Also, if you do know of some urls where they
>>>have additional info, I'd be interested in reading it.

>>
>>
>> I would first suggest some background reading, either on
>> switching power supplies in general or if necessary, even
>> more basic like electronics in general. It's not the kind
>> of think I can condense into a few usenet posts and I don't
>> know of any website that does so either, as you first need
>> the requisite background on power, electronics, SMPS,
>> computer power demands, then to tie it all together in
>> context plus survey enough power supplies (including failure
>> modes of dead ones) to get a better picture.



Reply With Quote
  #22 (permalink)  
Old 08-19-2005, 03:19 AM
kony
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

On Thu, 18 Aug 2005 12:06:56 -0500, Analabha Roy
<daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:

>
> OK, I've been sufficiently frightened to buy a ridiculously expensive $80
>PSU which I got this morning at FRY's. This one:
>
>http://www.antec.com/us/productDetai...?ProdID=26500#
>
>
>
> Hope it was worth it.



How can you argue that $80 is ridiculously expensive when
most motherboards, CPUs, SCSI HDDs and decent video cards
cost far more? Not sure what it is with people these days
thinking a PSU is supposed to be cheap... if you want cheap
then buy all small/old/slow system components too, which
will use less power. If you reallly need > 400W PSU, $80 is
a reasonable price point.

Reply With Quote
  #23 (permalink)  
Old 08-19-2005, 09:16 AM
Analabha Roy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

kony wrote:

> On Thu, 18 Aug 2005 12:06:56 -0500, Analabha Roy
> <daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:
>
>>
>> OK, I've been sufficiently frightened to buy a ridiculously expensive $80
>>PSU which I got this morning at FRY's. This one:
>>
>>http://www.antec.com/us/productDetai...?ProdID=26500#
>>
>>
>>
>> Hope it was worth it.

>
>
> How can you argue that $80 is ridiculously expensive when
> most motherboards, CPUs, SCSI HDDs and decent video cards
> cost far more?



Well my 128 Mb Radeon 9250 cost me only $50....




> Not sure what it is with people these days
> thinking a PSU is supposed to be cheap... if you want cheap
> then buy all small/old/slow system components too, which
> will use less power. If you reallly need > 400W PSU, $80 is
> a reasonable price point.



It's just that you can get good OEM/Clearence deals on SCSI HDD's, high
flop CPUs, mobos with 10 PCI/5 AGP/4 DIMM slots etc but nobody seems to
want to give deals on Antec PSU's ( I checked all the usual haunts: newegg,
ecost, techbargains etc). Vendor lock in?

Reply With Quote
  #24 (permalink)  
Old 08-19-2005, 12:33 PM
kony
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Default Re: SCSI Hard drive suddenly shuts down and restarts

On Fri, 19 Aug 2005 04:16:40 -0500, Analabha Roy
<daneelNOSPAM@physics.utexas.edu> wrote:


>> Not sure what it is with people these days
>> thinking a PSU is supposed to be cheap... if you want cheap
>> then buy all small/old/slow system components too, which
>> will use less power. If you reallly need > 400W PSU, $80 is
>> a reasonable price point.

>
>
> It's just that you can get good OEM/Clearence deals on SCSI HDD's, high
>flop CPUs, mobos with 10 PCI/5 AGP/4 DIMM slots etc but nobody seems to
>want to give deals on Antec PSU's ( I checked all the usual haunts: newegg,
>ecost, techbargains etc). Vendor lock in?



Consider that technological depreciation is far faster for
any of those products. Once there aren't many modern
systems that can use a 500W ATX PSU, whatever stock of those
remains will also likely be cleared out. Until that
happens, there is no reason they'd mark them down if there
is no better alternative to displace their product segment.
They do occasionally go on sales though and through some
pricing engines you might find one for closer to $60.

There are occasionally deals on older PSU though, a couple
years ago I picked up some very nice server grade Lite-On
and Delta PSU at deep discount. They aren't ATX12V though,
but at the time I had some sytems built with Athlons that
needed PSU with beefy 5V rails and the value couldn't be
beat. Point being, getting deals on these kinds of parts is
more of an keep-an-eye-open-and-buy-on-the-spot scenario,
rather than deciding one day that you need it and buying
immediately from lowest cost vendor at that moment.

There's also a significant price jump between 400-450W PSU
and 500W, you might've saved $20-30 by going with one simply
because they're more common... they're not worth the
disproportionately higher price unless you did happen to
need that many watts which is doubtful. Any of them are
miles ahead of the typical generic though.

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