Greet's from Jersey,
I just inherited 12 older 9G SCSI drives and was wondering if there was even a point to putting these into a tower with a controller. Truth is they were probably free for a reason but then people are still using 486's for crying out loud, so why not ask.
I got 6 Seagate ST39173W's and 6 IBM OEM drives with a p/n of 22L0231. All 9 GB and 7200rpm. An hour in the net has taught me the difference between the 80 pin ultra2 IBM drives and the 68 pin Segates, but WTF does that mean?
If someone can give me a good use for half of them, I'll sell you the other six for a buck. Bear in mind I'm wickedly content with my subnotebook, so I obviously don't do the Halflife/ Age of/ Dragon/ whatever thing... but maybe there is a use for htese after all...
I just inherited 12 older 9G SCSI drives and was wondering if there was even a point to putting these into a tower with a controller. Truth is they were probably free for a reason but then people are still using 486's for crying out loud, so why not ask.
I got 6 Seagate ST39173W's and 6 IBM OEM drives with a p/n of 22L0231. All 9 GB and 7200rpm. An hour in the net has taught me the difference between the 80 pin ultra2 IBM drives and the 68 pin Segates, but WTF does that mean?
If someone can give me a good use for half of them, I'll sell you the other six for a buck. Bear in mind I'm wickedly content with my subnotebook, so I obviously don't do the Halflife/ Age of/ Dragon/ whatever thing... but maybe there is a use for htese after all...