Zach Mull
May 9th, 2005, 08:20 PM
I work at a tiny dv-only house, and my boss wants to add copy protection to our DVDs when we send them for replication, which means we have to start mastering to DLT. He bought an old Quantum TH5BA DLT drive on eBay on a whim, and now we're trying to figure out the best way to connect it to a G5. He finally got a SCSI card (an Adaptec PowerDomain 29160) that we could install in the G5, but he discovered that the drive has a 50-pin interface, while the card's only external port is a 68-pin. Now I want to know whether it's possible to connect this drive.
Does anyone have experience using 50-pin-to-68-pin conversion cables (which some places market) or with SCSI-to-firewire converters? The 50-to-68 solution somehow doesn't seem too reliable to me, and I don't know anyone who's tried the firewire adapters. Would one of those be a good solution?
The SCSI card does have an internal 50-pin interface, so one option my boss considered was running a cable from inside the G5 to the DLT drive. This didn't strike me as a great option, but I have never tried a hack like that. Would there be any risk involved for the hardware other than maybe pinching the SCSI cable?
I would appreciate any help or advice because we are trying to get one of our projects to the replicators by the end of the week, preferably with copy protection.
Does anyone have experience using 50-pin-to-68-pin conversion cables (which some places market) or with SCSI-to-firewire converters? The 50-to-68 solution somehow doesn't seem too reliable to me, and I don't know anyone who's tried the firewire adapters. Would one of those be a good solution?
The SCSI card does have an internal 50-pin interface, so one option my boss considered was running a cable from inside the G5 to the DLT drive. This didn't strike me as a great option, but I have never tried a hack like that. Would there be any risk involved for the hardware other than maybe pinching the SCSI cable?
I would appreciate any help or advice because we are trying to get one of our projects to the replicators by the end of the week, preferably with copy protection.