I cannot stagger the spin-up, the enclosure has only 1 power button. I
started solving the riddle by disconnecting all the power and data
cables to ALL drives inside the enclosure. Then I connected one
Firewire connector with one ribbon cable (which I knew to be working)
to the first 2 HDs, tested them, went on the next 2 HDs, etc. This
proved that all the HD pairs spin up and work with the computer fine
by themselves. Next I started substituting the other ribbon cables,
and the other FireWire connectors. By doing this I soon established
that I of the 5 ribbon cables and 2 of the 5 FireWire connectors ("IDE
to FireWire converter bridgeboards" in fancy lingo) in the enclosure
are dead.
After throwing those away ("weeding my enclosure"... how pastoral), I
got six HDs, two per each remaining good FireWire connector / ribbon
cable to spin up and work just peachy. So we have an intermediate
solution, a pared-down rig. Now the question is, what killed so many
of these parts, could it be still a lack of juice? But how could that
kill a ribbon cable?
The answer determines what I do next. I could simply get more FireWire
connectors to replace the dead ones, and upgrade (or not) the power
supply. Or I could beef up the power supply and get ribbon cables with
4 HD connectors instead of 2 to use the remaining good FireWire
connectors. Or I could start looking into FireWire to SATA connectors
instead, from now, if this is an issue of IDE to FireWire converters
being simply poorly made. Any suggestions?
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