Zorb wrote:
Check resistance of motor windings. I do not believe this drive has unique NVRAM. This drive is one of the later IBM models, just before the Hitachi transition.
Oh, and please tell me you checked the jumper on it? This drive can be configured different ways, from spin on power on, spin on power on+delay (LUN * X seconds), to spin on Motor Start command from SCSI interface.
In my experience also, IBM SCSI drives sometimes will not spin if not connected to SCSI bus. My 36LZXs won't. Call me old school, but I've found in the past (pre FDB) that you can tell a lot about a drive by listening to it spin at idle in a silent environment, as well as feeling the vibration in your hand. I used to use a small plug in test transformer for this, with Molex connector on it and current/voltage display on the transformer unit. I used to send any drive that didn't sound to my approval back, without further testing. You can hear a WD instantly, and they still (except Scorpio) generally sound like s**t. Anyway, I was on the brink of sending them back, had IBM on the phone, explained that the drive didn't spin regardless of motor jumper setting, even with SCSI disconnected. The lady I talked to said that some firmware versions of the drive checks for ground or potential or continuity (I forget what exactly) on certain pins detected at the SCSI connector and if not it will not spin at all.
The donor drive I have spins fine when connected. Same jumper settings on bad drive. I will try hot swap before I do anything else.