Dave, hooked he drive string up to the scsi on the back of the machine as it had been robbed of it's array controller ( got an extra one?) I snaked the cable thru the cabinet and out though a card clot and plugged it into the back socket on the MB which I assume is a ultra wide scsi... I then jammed an IDE card in and booted a floppy that booted the ide drive with win 98 in it and threw it on a drive.. but then weirdly.... win 98 would not recognize the ide or the cd once running.....
I will try to hunt the compaq CD next and get the cd drive booting...
I think I will also try to hunt the aux drive cabinet also.. have a pagemarq 20 laser to set next to it that was given to the musem, if nothing else all this will make a nice compaq display for the computer section of our engineering museum.
( see
www.smecc.org)
thanks for all the help! This box should be great to run sme on!
if any of my other info I have added strikes a cord on anything fill me in!
ed sharpe archivist for smeccdave wrote:
>
> It should boot directly to the CD. If the CD is non
> functional, in that it won't boot any normally bootable CD,
> then you may have a problem with the drive. I don't believe
> there's any bios setable options to keep it from booting a
> CD, you might want to check the docs on the compaq site,
> there may be a switch setting that effects this.
>
> Higher speed SCSI CD ROM drives are available, the one in
> that proliant is a 2 or 4 speed, tops. It's a narrow device,
> with the wide 50pin ribbon cable. That should plug directly
> to the motherboard. The drive cage should plug to the array
> card, I dont' think you can do both with the motherboard. I
> don't recall the specifics, I always used a RAID card for
> drives and plugged the CD into the motherboard.
>
> The hard part will be getting that setup CD. I don't know if
> there is anything available on the web site for that, though
> there should be setup packages available from online
> locations, of course ebay comes to mind... It's called smart
> start. If you get any smart start that supports proliants,
> it'll support the 5000. I had a set that I used to configure
> the 1500, the 4500 and the 5000 so I know the setup CD is
> pretty generic.
>
> They are great servers that were the best you could get when
> they were new. A place I used to work was 'retiring' a bunch
> of old proliant equipment and I was happy to give it a new
> home. A fully loaded quad 133 processor 4500 with half a gig
> of memory and 5 internal drives, 2 array cards and 3 external
> 7 drive array cabinets. The internal drives and 2 of the
> array cabinets were full of 2 gig drives, one of the cabinets
> had 4 gig drives, 26 drives total. A little looking online
> said this equipment cost nearly $100,000 when new just shy of
> 4 years earlier, and they were going to toss it in a
> dumpster. There was a bunch of other stuff too, a couple
> 1500's and a 2500, those had been raided for any usable
> parts. I wound up getting a 4500 to 5000 upgrade kit online
> and had that set up for a while. I got tired of the noise
> and the clutter - actually my Wife did, I was fine with it...
>
> Good luck getting that beastie up and running. If you do,
> and you have a few bucks lying around, you might consider
> upping the processors to full capacity with 4 200mhz procs.
> Check the Intel site, with PPro's I don't think you have to
> worry about matching s-spec codes.