Info needed on Exabyte Stackers and Pioneer CDROM Changers

2007-12-25 8:06:00

The original question was:

> We are looking at investing in both an Exabyte 8500 with stacker attachment and

> a Pioneer CDROM changer (model 600 or 604). Does anyone out there have any

> comments (positive or negative) they'd like to share about these contraptions?

>

> Thanks in advance. I will summarize and post the replies.

>

>

The overall responses on the Prioneer CDROM changer (models 600 or 604) were

very positive. The only reservation was one response which talked about how

the system was frozen while CDs were being changed.

The Exabyte stacker responses were varied. The point was made about the two

diffrent models about there, the Model 10 and 10i. The plain, vanilla 10

will only feed tapes sequentially. Random access feeding is accomplished by

buying the 10i with custom software from the vendor (or writing it yourself).

Some people seemed to have excellent performance with them while others had

various mehcanical problems.

The responses follow. Thanks much to everyone who replied.

                                                           Janaka Jayawardena

LOCAL: janaka Systems Manager - Electrical Engineering

INTERNET:janaka@ee.pdx.edu (503)-725-3806

USNAIL: Portland State University (EE), P.O.Box 751, Portland, OR 97207

============================================================================

respones:

From: tots!tots.Logicon.COM!tep@UCSD.EDU

Date: Tue, 16 Feb 93 10:34:19 PST

X-Organization: Logicon, Inc., San Diego, California

Talk to Louis Brune at Andataco (andataco!louis@ucsd.edu, or maybe

louis@andataco.com, +1 619 453-9191). He once showed me an Exabyte cartridge

with ROUNDED CORNERS, because he had run it through the stacker for

weeks, to test its reliability!

Tom E. Perrine (tep) | tep@Logicon.COM |Voice: +1 619 597 7221

Logicon, Inc. | sun!suntan!tots!tep | or : +1 619 455 1330

4010 Sorrento Valley Blvd| | FAX: +1 619 552 0729

San Diego CA 92121-1498 | Every child is a gifted child !

=======================================================================

From: pdijlh@pii.com (Jason Hargis)

        We just bought a Pioneer CD-ROM Drive (model 600), I like the way that it works, however there is one small thing you might wish to think about. When the CD-ROM drive must access a new disk it takes a couple of seconds, while it changes disks, the workstation it is connected to will "freeze" for 1 to 2 seconds, it may not be that big of an issue, however it could get to "bugging" if diskschange offen.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Jason L. Hargis |E-Mail: pdijlh@pii.com (internet)

UNIX Systems Administrator |Phone : (503) 682-5536

Praegitzer Design Inc. |FAX : (503) 685-5544

9255 SW Pioneer Court

Wilsonville Oregon, 97070

===============================================================================

From: ogicse!bit!jayl@ogicse.cse.ogi.edu (Jay Lessert)

Nothing on the CDROM changer, but we have an 8500 with an ACL 600

"dumb" six-tape stacker from Apunix and like it very much. Zero

stacker misfeeds in over a year (about 10 tapes/week)

The stacker is *very* simple, and fairly cheap (about $1000 more than

buying the drive in a simple enclosure). It is not random access, just

single pass sequential access (eject one tape, load the next, etc.).

Just what we needed since the application is unattended backups, not a

general-purpose tape library. No device driver is needed, you just go

'mt offline' to eject one tape and load the next. ACL also makes a

15-tape version.

Apunix Computer Services

5575 Ruffin Road

Suite 110

San Diego, CA 92123 USA

1-619-495-9229, (fax)1-619-495-9230

...!ucbvax!ucsd!apunix!sales, ucsd.edu!apunix.sales

Automated Cartridge Libraries, Inc.

1224 Sherman Drive

Longmont, CO 80501 USA

1-303-651-1224 (fax)1-303-776-7500

Jay Lessert {decwrl,cse.ogi.edu,sun,verdix}!bit!jayl

Bipolar Integrated Technology, Inc.

503-629-5490 (fax)503-690-1498

=======================================================================

From: "Peter D. Bille" <PETER@andataco.andataco.com>

Date: 16 Feb 93 07:16:17 PST

As far as the Exabyte 8500 in a stacker, it really depends on what

you are going to use it for. I do not recommend using this

device as a nearline solution. The Exabyte drives do not preform

well in these enviroments. They are not good at block addressing and

tend to hang-up after a couple of days. However if you are going to

use this as a backup device only, it is probably the best cost per mb

solution available. I also suggest using the stacker supplied by

Exabyte. Either their EXB10 or EXB10I, the EXB10 just does

sequential backups and requires no special drivers to work on a SUn

system. (you will need backup scripts) The EXB10I will allow random

access and their are a few good software packages available.

We have tried some of the less expensive stackers and they seem to

require more ajustments to aline the drive on a regular basis.

I have no experience with the CDROM changers.

Feel free to contact me if you have any further questions.

=======================================================================

Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1993 09:53:33 -0600

From: Steve Letter <sgl@houston.geoquest.slb.com>

We are using an Exabyte 10i with Legato Networker, can't say that

I recommend this combination now. We've broken two 8500 tape drives

in three months of usage (when the stacker closes the drive door)

and have had a multitude of small problems.

We've had this set up for about a year, but did not start using it

for anything other than evaluation until three months ago. To their

credit, both Exabyte and Legato have been very good at fixing the

problems as they come up and I believe that within the next 90 days

the system will have settled in and will be worth recommending.

                Steve Letter (sletter@Houston.GeoQuest.SLB.COM)

                Schlumberger - GeoQuest

                5858 Westheimer Rd., Suite 800

                Houston, TX 77057-5648

                (713) 952-2100

                Fax (713) 952-2420

=======================================================================

From: alida!swj@uunet.UU.NET (Stephen W. Jay)

Hi,

One important point on the Exabyte 10i stacker, alot of vendors sell them

without any drivers. The stacker gets its control commands from the scsi

buss (serial optional) and unless you want to write your own driver, make sure

that your vendor or backup software vendor supplies one.

ps, the Exb 10i mechanism appears to be quite reliable and the internal 8500

is completely generic and swapable.

===================================================================

| Stephen W. Jay | Alida, Inc. | GURUtape |

| swj@alida.com | 27 McDermott Place | GT rje |

| (800) 883-GURU | Bergenfield, NJ 07621 | GT Backup |

===================================================================

=======================================================================

From: tkevans@fallst.es.dupont.com (Tim Evans)

Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1993 07:29:23 -0500 (EST)

Quoth janaka@ursula.ee.pdx.edu:

>

>We are looking at investing in both an Exabyte 8500 with stacker attachment and

>a Pioneer CDROM changer (model 600 or 604). Does anyone out there have any

>comments (positive or negative) they'd like to share about these contraptions?

>

This is not exactly related, but here's something to chew on anyway. We

run an 8mm tape jukebox (not a stacker) and use it for unattended backups.

We have a *lot* of disk around the network and are finding that there's

a major time bottleneck in doing backups when you only have one tape

drive. Even if you have 20-30GB capacity with these devices, you're

still backing up ONE SYSTEM AT A TIME. In our case, full backups take

the entire weekend.

IMHO, when you get to this situation, having spent the money on a stacker

or jukebox is not necessarily the best way to have spent money. You

get much more bang for the backup buck by running multiple backups in

parallel on multiple tape drives than you do with a jukebox or stacker.

That is, I can back up 5 machines AT THE SAME TIME if they each have a

tape drive, without clogging up the network. If each backup takes an

hour, the five backups are done in a total of one hour; if the backups

are going to a stacker or jukebox, the backup takes FIVE hours.


--
UUCP: {rutgers|ames|uunet}!mimsy!wb3ffv!fallst!tkevans
INTERNET: tkevans@fallst.es.dupont.com
Tim Evans 2201 Brookhaven Ct, Fallston, MD 21047
=======================================================================
Date: Tue, 16 Feb 1993 10:42:29 +0800 (WST)

Re Exabyte stackers - work fine, had very few problems. The only one is that
sometimes the door doesn't quite close properly, or pops open while the drive
is in use, turning it offline.

If you intend to use the stacker with a third-party software package and
expect it to intelligently find the correct tape in the stack, be aware that
you will need an Exabyte 10i (not just a 10), and software drivers to do this.
A client of mine mistakenly assumed that their backup and retrieval package
would automatically search for tapes in any case and bought a 10 and the
"plain vanilla" software version...

Don't quote my name! My client might get a bit upset if they see it...

=======================================================================
From: mc@msss.com (Mike Caplinger)

I just installed a Pioneer DRM-604X a few days ago. You don't need a
special driver and it's much faster then the 600 was. I was quite
pleased.

Mike Caplinger, MSSS/Caltech Mars Observer Camera Project
mc@msss.com, mc@moc.jpl.nasa.gov

=======================================================================
From: phillips@qualcomm.com (Marc Phillips)

We have three 10i Exabyte stackers, with 8500 drives in them. We purchased
them along with some really good drivers from AP-Unix. They have been a
dream come true.

Marc Phillips

=======================================================================
>From: larry@mitra.mitra.com (Larry Williamson)
>Newsgroups: comp.sys.sun.admin

We just received a Pioneer 604x changer yesterday. Looks like a very
nice machine.

It is unfortunate that it is an odd shape when placed on a stack of
Sun equipment, but that's life, eh? Maybe it looks better stacked on a
Pioneer computer :-)

The 604X is seems fast. This is a subjective measurment. It is rated
at 600Kbytes/sec

I booted the SunOS 4.1.3 CD ROM and installed on a sparc 10 just last
night using this drive. No problems at all.

We've ordered some special driver from Tracer Technologies in Maryland
(301) 977-1398. It has not arrived yet, but from my conversations with
the tech people there, it sounds like a good package.

-Larry
=======================================================================
Date: Wed, 17 Feb 93 16:25:53 MST
From: Mario Nigrovic <mario@wdc.sps.mot.com>

Janaka -
I recently purchased an exabyte 8500C with an exabyte 10i (stacker).
The 8500C is internal to the stacker, so this may not be what you're
talking about.

I have no complaints about the stacker (it needs special software
to intelligently select cartridges, but this was part of the package).
The door on the Exabyte 8500C jammed open on me once, within one month
of installation. The drive was replaced, and the salesperson/fae was
able to close the door with a fair amount of force as he packaged it
up to go. Probably some grit got on one of the door wheels; I've had
some problems closing the doors on my other exabytes, but none had
ever jammed before.

Mario

Mario Nigrovic <mario@wdc.sps.mot.com> voice: (602) 821-4264
Motorola Western MCU Design Center fax: (602) 821-4058
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