Unfortunately no one can be told what fun_plug is - you have to see it for yourself.
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Another question upon DNS power supply...
reading datasheet (http://www.seagate.com/docs/pdf/datashe … 200_10.pdf) we see that spinup power comsumption (for all barracuda drives) is 2.8 Amps... so considering that drived are spinned up sequentially ... if i suppose to have installed two barracuda, when the second is spinned up... remains very low current 0.2A to mantain 7200 rpm to first drive... so what i miss...? this cannot cause power supply failure... after many power on ?
May i swith to another drive (for example 7K1000 require only 2.0 A at spinup)....?
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There is a built-in current overload protection in the DNS-323 power supply so a short current spike is not going to destroy it.
SD
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skydreamer wrote:
There is a built-in current overload protection in the DNS-323 power supply so a short current spike is not going to destroy it.
SD
this don't mean that is safe use two Barracuda drive... DNS323 may not work properly, working with not enought current... at least one barracuda drive i think can cause problem if spinning up as second drive... but this is my opinion.. i'm not an electronic engeneer... but i wolud like to know the opinion of this forum...
thank to all...
Raoul
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There are separate 12V and 5V power lines, only the 12V line gets loaded during the disk spin-up, while 5V is used for the electronics so no worries.
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There's a list of Seagate drives that will work per D-Link at...
http://support.dlink.com/faq/view.asp?p … on=DNS-323
I also have a pair and it appears to work just fine...
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skydreamer wrote:
There are separate 12V and 5V power lines, only the 12V line gets loaded during the disk spin-up, while 5V is used for the electronics so no worries.
ok, and then? 12V get overloaded and 5v no, but the 2.8 amp requested on 12v ..are to much...because 0,2 Amp left are too less to manteined spinned up the second drive.... i think that with this load, you don't have 12V output... and also you don't have +5v on output.. so nothing will work... i think...
Perhaps, you have not explained clearly your are thinking....
But i think there are some alternative seagate drives... that spin up with only 2 amp....
Last edited by raoul.grasselli (2007-04-17 10:24:55)
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