DEC RRD40 CDROM Drives

From: Eric Dittman <dittman_at_dittman.net>
Date: Mon Apr 23 20:34:00 2001

> I think the board he is talking about is a SCSI <==> audio CD
> interface...

The board is an LSI-SCSI adapter. This allowed the
drives to be used in a SCSI system. When I used one
of these drives with a MicroVAX 3900 there was an
interface that drove the drive directly. The RRD40
drives are slow, and the adapter makes them slower.
An RRD42 is a much better and easier to use drive.

> The original CD (not CD-ROM) interface is a three (or four) wire
> affair with Left/Right, Clock, Serial data which is fed into
> a DAC to produce music... The early CD-ROM drives took these
> signals, recognized the sector header (00-FF-FF-FF-FF-00 IIRC)
> and decoded the data. Presumably, some extra signals were added
> to control seeking, etc...

The audio interface wasn't used with the SCSI adapter.

> I've got one of these boards, and I suspect the parts removed
> were: 80C31, 27C256, and NCR 5380 (only parts socketted).
>
> The drive is completely useless without these chips.

The drive is certainly useable with these ICs. They just
can't be used in a SCSI system, but then again, with the
slow access and weird, hard-to-handle caddies, that's no
loss.
-- 
Eric Dittman
dittman_at_dittman.net
Received on Mon Apr 23 2001 - 20:34:00 BST

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