Hello everyone,
I recently installed my Adaptec PowerDomain 2930 SCSI card in my PowerMac G4 (MDD Dual 867MHz) in order to use my Nikon LS-2000 slide/negative scanner. I spent quite some time figuring this out, so I figured I'd share this adventure to help anyone out in the future.
I've been using this scanner on my G3 B&W with Mac OS 8.6. However this combination of hardware and old Nikon software lead to some frequent crashes, so I wanted to use VueScan on a newer Mac OS X machine to make things more efficient. This meant finding a Mac OS X compatible SCSI card.
Adaptec made quite a lot of SCSI cards for both Macs and PCs, some of them are thankfully Mac OS X compatible. However some require drivers to work. I did have a bit of trouble getting it to work wit my Mac. So here is what I figured out...
Thankfully Microchip (who I suppose acquired Adaptec) still has the drivers and manuals online for a lot of their cards. Here is their drive page for the 2930 (link). I picked up this G4 tower at a yard sale in 2018 and it still had a hard drive with a copy of Leopard installed. Although the drivers are on the Microchip website, the Mac OS X drivers don't have any compatibility or system requirements notes! All that is listed is a version number and a release date, so all I could do is guess what it would work with.
I knew Leopard may be pushing things, but I figured I'd try. Without drivers the "PCI Cards" section of the Apple System Profiler showed that no driver was installed for the SCSI Card. So I downloaded the v1.1 (Feb 2002) driver and attempted to install it, but the installation failed. I tried to be smart and install the driver manually, but that resulted in a lovely error upon startup.
So I busted out my Tiger install DVD and installed it on my G4. After using Software Update and waiting 3+ hours for the frozen update to finish "optimizing" my system, I performed a hard reboot and proceeded to reinstall v1.1 of the SCSI card drivers. Thankfully I did not receive an error upon startup. Although sadly Tiger's version of Apple System Profiler doesn't have a "Driver Installed" column in the PCI Card section. So I pressed on and launched a PowerPC copy of VueScan (9.0.x) and my scanner sprang to life! So I can confirm that version 1.1 of this driver works well with Mac OS X 10.4 "Tiger".
So based on the above, I can assume the following (based on the release dates of the various Mac OS X versions):
The version 1.0.2 driver (with a date of October 2001), is likely compatible with Mac OS X 10.1 "Puma" (released in September of 2001) and maybe 10.2 "Jaguar".
The version 1.1 of the driver (with a date of February 2002), is likely compatible with 10.2 "Jaguar", 10.3 "Panther", and seems to work fine in 10.4 "Tiger".
The Nikon LS-2000 isn't the fastest scanner, but the quality is well worth any time spent scanning in film at 2700 dpi. One of the scanners I bought online came with a "bonus" SCSI to FireWire adapter... and what a bonus that was! So I'm able to use the scanner (with VueScan) on my MacBook Pro while using another on my G4 to tackle on larger scan jobs. Sadly the SF-200 batch slide loader attachment goes for $500+ on eBay, so this will have to do for now.
And as a thank you for reading this, here are some non-retouched scans (and JPEG converted) photos for you all to check out, courtesy of my father and his camera in the 1970's.
I recently installed my Adaptec PowerDomain 2930 SCSI card in my PowerMac G4 (MDD Dual 867MHz) in order to use my Nikon LS-2000 slide/negative scanner. I spent quite some time figuring this out, so I figured I'd share this adventure to help anyone out in the future.
I've been using this scanner on my G3 B&W with Mac OS 8.6. However this combination of hardware and old Nikon software lead to some frequent crashes, so I wanted to use VueScan on a newer Mac OS X machine to make things more efficient. This meant finding a Mac OS X compatible SCSI card.
Adaptec made quite a lot of SCSI cards for both Macs and PCs, some of them are thankfully Mac OS X compatible. However some require drivers to work. I did have a bit of trouble getting it to work wit my Mac. So here is what I figured out...
Thankfully Microchip (who I suppose acquired Adaptec) still has the drivers and manuals online for a lot of their cards. Here is their drive page for the 2930 (link). I picked up this G4 tower at a yard sale in 2018 and it still had a hard drive with a copy of Leopard installed. Although the drivers are on the Microchip website, the Mac OS X drivers don't have any compatibility or system requirements notes! All that is listed is a version number and a release date, so all I could do is guess what it would work with.
I knew Leopard may be pushing things, but I figured I'd try. Without drivers the "PCI Cards" section of the Apple System Profiler showed that no driver was installed for the SCSI Card. So I downloaded the v1.1 (Feb 2002) driver and attempted to install it, but the installation failed. I tried to be smart and install the driver manually, but that resulted in a lovely error upon startup.
So I busted out my Tiger install DVD and installed it on my G4. After using Software Update and waiting 3+ hours for the frozen update to finish "optimizing" my system, I performed a hard reboot and proceeded to reinstall v1.1 of the SCSI card drivers. Thankfully I did not receive an error upon startup. Although sadly Tiger's version of Apple System Profiler doesn't have a "Driver Installed" column in the PCI Card section. So I pressed on and launched a PowerPC copy of VueScan (9.0.x) and my scanner sprang to life! So I can confirm that version 1.1 of this driver works well with Mac OS X 10.4 "Tiger".
So based on the above, I can assume the following (based on the release dates of the various Mac OS X versions):
The version 1.0.2 driver (with a date of October 2001), is likely compatible with Mac OS X 10.1 "Puma" (released in September of 2001) and maybe 10.2 "Jaguar".
The version 1.1 of the driver (with a date of February 2002), is likely compatible with 10.2 "Jaguar", 10.3 "Panther", and seems to work fine in 10.4 "Tiger".
The Nikon LS-2000 isn't the fastest scanner, but the quality is well worth any time spent scanning in film at 2700 dpi. One of the scanners I bought online came with a "bonus" SCSI to FireWire adapter... and what a bonus that was! So I'm able to use the scanner (with VueScan) on my MacBook Pro while using another on my G4 to tackle on larger scan jobs. Sadly the SF-200 batch slide loader attachment goes for $500+ on eBay, so this will have to do for now.
And as a thank you for reading this, here are some non-retouched scans (and JPEG converted) photos for you all to check out, courtesy of my father and his camera in the 1970's.