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Hard drive activity light for IDE and SCSI
Hi,
I've got a PC with three hard drives. The two SCSI drives are connected to a SCSI adapter, whereas the third drive is an ATAPI drive connected to the primary IDE controller. I've got the case's hard drive activity LED connected to the SCSI adapter, so the light shows me when the SCSI drives are active, but leaves me with no indication for the ATAPI drive. Is there any kind of 'Y-adapter' arrangement I could use to connect the activity light to both the SCSI and IDE I/O busses, thus reflecting I/O activity to all of my hard drives on a single light, or am I best off rigging up a second hard drive activity light for the IDE controllers? Thanks, Dave -- Dave Ulrick Email: Web: http://www.niu.edu/~ulrick/ |
#2
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"Dave Ulrick" wrote in
message ... I've got a PC with three hard drives. The two SCSI drives are connected to a SCSI adapter, whereas the third drive is an ATAPI drive connected to the primary IDE controller. I've got the case's hard drive activity LED connected to the SCSI adapter, so the light shows me when the SCSI drives are active, but leaves me with no indication for the ATAPI drive. Is there any kind of 'Y-adapter' arrangement I could use to connect the activity light to both the SCSI and IDE I/O busses, thus reflecting I/O activity to all of my hard drives on a single light, or am I best off rigging up a second hard drive activity light for the IDE controllers? If it were me, I'd sacrifice the power-on LED for the cause. -- AZC --- Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.516 / Virus Database: 313 - Release Date: 01/09/2003 |
#3
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On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 20:04:19 +0100,
Andrew Z Carpenter wrote: "Dave Ulrick" wrote in message ... I've got a PC with three hard drives. The two SCSI drives are connected to a SCSI adapter, whereas the third drive is an ATAPI drive connected to the primary IDE controller. I've got the case's hard drive activity LED connected to the SCSI adapter, so the light shows me when the SCSI drives are active, but leaves me with no indication for the ATAPI drive. Is there any kind of 'Y-adapter' arrangement I could use to connect the activity light to both the SCSI and IDE I/O busses, thus reflecting I/O activity to all of my hard drives on a single light, or am I best off rigging up a second hard drive activity light for the IDE controllers? If it were me, I'd sacrifice the power-on LED for the cause. Hey, that's a good idea. I'll consider doing that. I doubt that I'd miss the power LED 'cause the machine makes sufficient fan noise to remind me that it's on. :-) This brings another question to mind. It looks as though both the HDD LED and the power-on LED have two pins. On my motherboard (a Supermicro P6DBE), the power-on pins are documented like this: Pin 9 PW_ON Pin 10 Ground As for the HDD LED pins, they're documented like so: Pin 1 +5V Pin 2 HDD active Pin 3 HDD active Pin 4 +5V The manual goes on to say that you should connect your cable to pins 1 and 2. It has no explanation of why you'd use pins 3 and 4. If I'm going to connect my case's power-on LED wires to the HDD LED pins, what would be the correct orientation? My guess is that pins 1 and 9 are "live" whereas pins 2 and 10 are ground. Is this correct? I'm sure getting it backwards won't fry anything, but it would be nice to get it right the first time. :-) Thanks, Dave -- Dave Ulrick Email: Web: http://www.niu.edu/~ulrick/ |
#4
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"Dave Ulrick" wrote in message ... On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 20:04:19 +0100, Andrew Z Carpenter wrote: "Dave Ulrick" wrote in message ... I've got a PC with three hard drives. The two SCSI drives are connected to a SCSI adapter, whereas the third drive is an ATAPI drive connected to the primary IDE controller. I've got the case's hard drive activity LED connected to the SCSI adapter, so the light shows me when the SCSI drives are active, but leaves me with no indication for the ATAPI drive. Is there any kind of 'Y-adapter' arrangement I could use to connect the activity light to both the SCSI and IDE I/O busses, thus reflecting I/O activity to all of my hard drives on a single light, or am I best off rigging up a second hard drive activity light for the IDE controllers? If it were me, I'd sacrifice the power-on LED for the cause. Hey, that's a good idea. I'll consider doing that. I doubt that I'd miss the power LED 'cause the machine makes sufficient fan noise to remind me that it's on. :-) This brings another question to mind. It looks as though both the HDD LED and the power-on LED have two pins. On my motherboard (a Supermicro P6DBE), the power-on pins are documented like this: Pin 9 PW_ON Pin 10 Ground As for the HDD LED pins, they're documented like so: Pin 1 +5V Pin 2 HDD active Pin 3 HDD active Pin 4 +5V The manual goes on to say that you should connect your cable to pins 1 and 2. It has no explanation of why you'd use pins 3 and 4. If I'm going to connect my case's power-on LED wires to the HDD LED pins, what would be the correct orientation? My guess is that pins 1 and 9 are "live" whereas pins 2 and 10 are ground. Is this correct? I'm sure getting it backwards won't fry anything, but it would be nice to get it right the first time. :-) Thanks, Dave -- Dave Ulrick Email: Web: http://www.niu.edu/~ulrick/ Hi, You might want to take a look at DriveLED from o&o software, it's one way round your problem. http://www.oo-software.com/en/index.html HTH SteveH |
#5
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On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 20:14:57 GMT,
SteveH wrote: Hi, You might want to take a look at DriveLED from o&o software, it's one way round your problem. http://www.oo-software.com/en/index.html That looks really neat, and the price is certainly right! However, the PC in question runs Linux rather than Windows. I'll have to see if I can find something similar for Linux. Do any of you Linux users know of software that would simulate one or more hard drive activity lights on my XFree86 (more specifically, KDE) desktop? HTH SteveH Thanks, Dave -- Dave Ulrick Email: Web: http://www.niu.edu/~ulrick/ |
#6
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why not just make a pitail and LED setup, one color for each drive,even? mounting is a drill hole with hot glue
"Dave Ulrick" wrote in message ... Hi, I've got a PC with three hard drives. The two SCSI drives are connected to a SCSI adapter, whereas the third drive is an ATAPI drive connected to the primary IDE controller. I've got the case's hard drive activity LED connected to the SCSI adapter, so the light shows me when the SCSI drives are active, but leaves me with no indication for the ATAPI drive. Is there any kind of 'Y-adapter' arrangement I could use to connect the activity light to both the SCSI and IDE I/O busses, thus reflecting I/O activity to all of my hard drives on a single light, or am I best off rigging up a second hard drive activity light for the IDE controllers? Thanks, Dave -- Dave Ulrick Email: Web: http://www.niu.edu/~ulrick/ |
#7
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In article , Dave Ulrick wrote:
On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 20:04:19 +0100, Andrew Z Carpenter wrote: If it were me, I'd sacrifice the power-on LED for the cause. Hey, that's a good idea. I'll consider doing that. I doubt that I'd miss the power LED 'cause the machine makes sufficient fan noise to remind me that it's on. :-) Well, I've just done the deed, and I'm quite happy with how well it worked out. In fact, it's nearly uncanny how well it worked. It turns out that the manual I was looking at was not correct for my motherboard. In fact, the motherboard pin assignments are like this: HDD LED 1 +5V 2 HD active 3 HD active 4 +5V Power LED 5 +5V 6 +5V 7 Ground; LED control The 3-pin power LED wire connector had wires only on the left and right pins; the middle pin was not connected. By moving the 3-pin power LED connector to pins 1-3, the power LED's wires just happened to coincide with two of the +5V and HD active pins. The result: the quickest and dirtiest IDE hard drive activity light imaginable. Thus, my power LED shows IDE activity, and my HDD LED continues to show SCSI activity. Way cool. Thanks for the tip! Dave -- Dave Ulrick Email: Web: http://www.niu.edu/~ulrick/ |
#8
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I seem to recall that there used to be an antique program that would
use the scroll lock lights on the keyboard to indicate hard drive activity. Don't recall the name now and it's quite possible it wouldn't run on modern OS's but ya never know. My case comes with 6 drive LEDs on the front of the case for individual drives. I also have black vented bezels with drive LEDs on the 8 drives that I actually have in the case. When 2K boots up it does multiple sequential and random(?) drive accesses. I'm not going to look for the file; I have enough flashing lights already. ...... the colors........ On 12 Sep 2003 17:59:04 GMT, Dave Ulrick wrote: Hi, I've got a PC with three hard drives. The two SCSI drives are connected to a SCSI adapter, whereas the third drive is an ATAPI drive connected to the primary IDE controller. I've got the case's hard drive activity LED connected to the SCSI adapter, so the light shows me when the SCSI drives are active, but leaves me with no indication for the ATAPI drive. Is there any kind of 'Y-adapter' arrangement I could use to connect the activity light to both the SCSI and IDE I/O busses, thus reflecting I/O activity to all of my hard drives on a single light, or am I best off rigging up a second hard drive activity light for the IDE controllers? Thanks, Dave -- Dave Ulrick Email: Web: http://www.niu.edu/~ulrick/ ~~~~~~ Bait for spammers: root@localhost postmaster@localhost admin@localhost abuse@localhost ] ~~~~~~ Remove "spamless" to email me. |
#9
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Andrew Z Carpenter wrote:
If it were me, I'd sacrifice the power-on LED for the cause. In article , Dave Ulrick wrote: On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 20:04:19 +0100, Hey, that's a good idea. I'll consider doing that. I doubt that I'd miss the power LED 'cause the machine makes sufficient fan noise to remind me that it's on. :-) "Dave Ulrick" wrote in message ... Well, I've just done the deed, and I'm quite happy with how well it worked out. In fact, it's nearly uncanny how well it worked. It turns out that the manual I was looking at was not correct for my motherboard. In fact, the motherboard pin assignments are like this: HDD LED 1 +5V 2 HD active 3 HD active 4 +5V Power LED 5 +5V 6 +5V 7 Ground; LED control The 3-pin power LED wire connector had wires only on the left and right pins; the middle pin was not connected. By moving the 3-pin power LED connector to pins 1-3, the power LED's wires just happened to coincide with two of the +5V and HD active pins. The result: the quickest and dirtiest IDE hard drive activity light imaginable. Thus, my power LED shows IDE activity, and my HDD LED continues to show SCSI activity. Way cool. Thanks for the tip! Dave No problem, glad I could give you some inspiration. -- AZC --- Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.516 / Virus Database: 313 - Release Date: 01/09/2003 |
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