I am happy to report that the ZuluSCSI modification seems to work well. Here is a DTS-6D that I have modified. The ZuluSCSI is mounted in a bracket that was 3D printed by a friend of mine, and then mounted in a 5.25" to 3.5" bay adapter. I also drilled a hole and added an activity light to the board using the header pins. The ZuluSCSI is bus powered and requires no additional connections. I also modified the unit to use a new style ATX supply using an ATX to AT power supply adapter cable. I did have to lengthen the leads for the switch to reach the front panel.
All of the existing CDROM drives were removed, and the double bracket modified to accept two vent panels I had laying around. The 5" monitor was installed on the panels after mounting modifications were made. A CGA or VGA ISA card is added to the motherboard for monitoring. The bus order doesn't matter according to the DTS documentation, and this is one of the older units with a 486SX in it. A molex pigtail was used to power the monitor from the ATX +12V bus.
The ZuluSCSI can emulate up to 7 discs from one SD card. Each DTS disc is ripped to an ISO file, and then renamed to CD1.ISO, CD2.ISO, etc. The CD is an important part of the file name, as it instructs the ZuluSCSI to emulate a CDROM drive with appropriate sector size and such. The number in the file name instructs the ZuluSCSI of which SCSI ID to advertise on the bus. It is important not to load more than one set of DTS disc ISO's on the SD card, but adding a trailer disc is OK. With the low cost of decent SD cards, this means ideally you set up one card for each feature.
I hope this information is helpful to those wanting to try this.
Josh
All of the existing CDROM drives were removed, and the double bracket modified to accept two vent panels I had laying around. The 5" monitor was installed on the panels after mounting modifications were made. A CGA or VGA ISA card is added to the motherboard for monitoring. The bus order doesn't matter according to the DTS documentation, and this is one of the older units with a 486SX in it. A molex pigtail was used to power the monitor from the ATX +12V bus.
The ZuluSCSI can emulate up to 7 discs from one SD card. Each DTS disc is ripped to an ISO file, and then renamed to CD1.ISO, CD2.ISO, etc. The CD is an important part of the file name, as it instructs the ZuluSCSI to emulate a CDROM drive with appropriate sector size and such. The number in the file name instructs the ZuluSCSI of which SCSI ID to advertise on the bus. It is important not to load more than one set of DTS disc ISO's on the SD card, but adding a trailer disc is OK. With the low cost of decent SD cards, this means ideally you set up one card for each feature.
I hope this information is helpful to those wanting to try this.
Josh
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