Newsgroups: comp.sys.3b1
Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!hobbes.physics.uiowa.edu!news.iastate.edu!vancleef
From: vancleef@iastate.edu (Van Cleef Henry H)
Subject: Teac 3.5 drive jumpers
Message-ID: <1991Jun23.205956.19795@news.iastate.edu>
Originator: vancleef@tbird.cc.iastate.edu
Sender: news@news.iastate.edu (USENET News System)
Organization: Iowa State University, Ames, IA
Date: Sun, 23 Jun 1991 20:59:56 GMT
Lines: 30

A few weeks ago I asked about jumpers on a Teac 3.5 floppy, and got some
random responses ranging from "lotsa luck" to a list of jumpers for a
drive that has many more than the one I bought.

I spent some time yesterday getting mine to work.  Move the drive select
to D0, and connect across the RY pins, jumper pin 34 on (ST), and the
thing works like a champ.  

The control/data connector was installed backward from that on the 5-1/4
I removed.  Pin numbers are marked on the circuit board, be sure to get
these correct.  It also took a little creative cable folding and routing
to get the cables installed.  

A couple of things I found that I didn't see on the FAQ sheet:
To get the plastic cover with the fan and power switch off, I had to
walk around the periphery with a screwdriver to release some snap-in
tabs.  Also, when putting the top metal cover with the disks back in
place, I found that the power connector for the hard drive would jam
the back frame, needed to be lifted to allow the cover to slide all the
way back.  

I have the foundation set and development system cpio-d to the hard
disk, and now to write them out to 3.5 disks so that I can reinstall
from 3.5 if need be.  That should give me enough space to unpack mtools2
which is supposed to handle DOS 720K floppies.

-- 
Hank van Cleef  
vancleef@iastate.edu	Iowa State University, Ames. Ia.
tmn!vancleef		The Union Institute, Cincinnati, Oh.
