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Tom and others, I have not solved my problem, but I did find a work-around that someone might find useful. I start up windows with the Epson off. After Windows is running and happy I go to START - SETTINGS- CONTROL PANEL - SYSTEM - DEVICE MANAGER. I then highlight "Imaging Devices" or the SCSI card and hit refresh. After a few seconds, Windows recognizes the Epson and all is well. This is a pain and I would like to find the real solution, but this is better than before. Jim -----Original Message----- From: owner-scan@leben.com [mailto:owner-scan@leben.com] On Behalf Of Thomas B. Maugham Sent: Sunday, March 10, 2002 3:49 PM To: scan@leben.com Subject: RE: Epson 1680 SCSI Problem If you've done all that and even more I would now come to the conclusion that there is something wrong with the 1680. Good luck and let us know how you finally make out. Tom -----Original Message----- From: owner-scan@leben.com [mailto:owner-scan@leben.com]On Behalf Of Jim Allen Sent: Friday, March 08, 2002 11:01 AM To: scan@leben.com Subject: RE: Epson 1680 SCSI Problem Thanks Tom, I tried various ID numbers for the Epson and various termination scenarios, except I have not yet tried turning the termination off on the Epson switch and using a termination device in the other SCSI port. I think what I am dealing with here is something specific to the Epson 1680 since two other SCSI devices either alone or together work great on the SCSI port. It is only the Epson that causes the hang-up. What I was hoping was that someone else had had a similar issue with an Epson scanner and could shed some light. I am continuing to work on the problem and will let everyone know if I come up with a solution. Regards, Jim -----Original Message----- From: owner-scan@leben.com [mailto:owner-scan@leben.com] On Behalf Of Thomas B. Maugham Sent: Thursday, March 07, 2002 1:31 PM To: scan@leben.com Subject: RE: Epson 1680 SCSI Problem I doubt that it's a driver issue. I saw somewhere in the chain of messages that someone said to terminate the first and last devices. That's wrong! Only the last device in the chain should be terminated. Also, check to make sure that the SCSI ID number (usually set on the back of each device) is the one recommended for use by the hardware manufacturer. For example, my SS4000 prefers SCSI address 5 so that's what I have it set to. It's the last device on my chain, the device before it being a JAZ drive which is set to address 4. I have an Adaptec card also and I seem to remember that there is a parameter somewhere about automatic termination. Check on that too. If the above doesn't work then I would check to be sure that the SCSI card is properly seated in the motherboard, try the SCSI card in a differt slot, be sure the SCSI card is properly configured, make sure the cables are firmly attached, it could be a bad cable so try a different cable(s) if possible, Try using only one device at a time, etc. SCSI can sometimes be a pain to set up but once it's set up correctly it's really great. Good luck! Tom . - Turn off HTML mail features. Keep quoted material short. Use accurate subject lines. http://www.leben.com/lists for list instructions. - Turn off HTML mail features. Keep quoted material short. Use accurate subject lines. http://www.leben.com/lists for list instructions. - Turn off HTML mail features. Keep quoted material short. Use accurate subject lines. http://www.leben.com/lists for list instructions.
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