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- From: milton@teal.csn.org (Milton Scritsmier)
- Newsgroups: comp.periphs.scsi
- Subject: Re: Noise like a seek coming from new scsi hard drive.
- Message-ID: <C1HD55.837@csn.org>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 21:31:48 GMT
- References: <paul.727942408@suite.sw.oz.au> <1993Jan26.075051.18273@hippo.ru.ac.za>
- Sender: news@csn.org (news)
- Organization: Colorado SuperNet, Inc.
- Lines: 31
- Nntp-Posting-Host: teal.csn.org
-
- In article <1993Jan26.075051.18273@hippo.ru.ac.za> pi@cs.sun.ac.za writes:
- >In <paul.727942408@suite.sw.oz.au>, Paul Antoine (paul@suite.sw.oz.au) wrote:
- >: This is normal: most newer drives do this to avoid a stiction problem
- >: first made famous in Quantum hard drives (the 40, 80 and 100MB Pro
- >: Drive series). It is not harmful, and only occasionally impinges upon
- >: both the senses and performance of the drive (at least, my Fujitsu
- >: seems to do it regardless of other disk operations in progress).
- >
- >The same happens with my Micropolis drive. The only thing that puzzles
- >me is that all these SCSI drives are supposed to be intelligent, so why
- >is it trying to move the heads around while they are actually moving
- >around doing reads and writes? Why can't these drives wait until it is
- >idle for a while before moving the heads around?!
-
- If it's a case of the drive doing a thermal calibration rather than a
- stiction avoidance problem, then just moving the heads around on a
- read or write doesn't solve the problem. Thermal calibration seeks have
- to be done whether or not the drive is being used.
-
- There are many ways that drive vendors try to schedule them, and some
- even give the host some choice in when they are done. Most drives wait
- until there are no outstanding commands, but since the calibration
- sequence can take a second or more for all platters, you are likely
- to get some commands coming in during the calibration sequence. Some
- vendors allow a choice doing the calibration at the start of a command,
- so that you take one big hit and then it's over. HP allows the host to
- disable automatic calibrations and only does them when a Rezero command
- is issued. If the drive decides it absolutely must do a calibration before
- continuing, it returns a Write Fault on any Seek, Read, or Write command
- until a Write or Rezero command is issued, at which point it does the
- calibration.
-