On Sat, Dec 16, 2000 at 04:11:26AM -0600, Kent West wrote: > Dan Griswold wrote: > > One peculiar thing about all this is that, again, a HARDWARE eject > > command (pressing the button) won't work. Why would that be? > > This may be stating the obvious, but can you do a hardware eject if the > zip drive is unconnected from the computer? If not, it's a problem in > the zip drive itself. IIRC, there's a pinhole (similar to a Macintosh > floppy drive) that you can stick an unfolded paper clip into to force > eject the zippie.
kent's message reminded me -- when a mac has a zip drive attached (it's gonna be ascsi device then, but it's probably otherwise similar) the software just takes over. the hardware button does nothing. (just as the floppy drive on any mac, you gotta use the software to 'put away' the item and the computer ejects it for you.) so it's a good thing to try -- if you power down and/or disconnect your zip drive, THEN try the eject button after powering it back on. if it doesn't do its thing, you've got a drive problem. if it does, then your system isn't communicating the right signals. [good luck, there!] i once had a similar problem with a jaz drive, but the 'door' mechanism there is quite different (the slider thing didn't catch on insert, but got jammed instead on extract). the zip is more like a floppy, the way the stainless steel cover slides over to protect the media. -- There are only two places in the world where time takes precedence over the job to be done. School and prison. --William Glasser [EMAIL PROTECTED] *** http://www.dontUthink.com/ volunteer to document your experience for next week's newbies -- http://www.eGroups.com/messages/newbieDoc