I'll try the other addresses. When I tried <G=C800:5>, the light on the HD
(Seagate ST-506 5 MB) came on for about 10 seconds, the screen went blank,
and the computer rebooted. I'll see if the other addresses will work.
ThAnX,
-Jason
***********************************************
* Jason Willgruber *
* (roblwill(a)usaor.net) *
* *
* http://members.tripod.com/general_1 *
* ICQ#-1730318 *
************************************************
>
> I tried to access the site, but it was too slow, and I was too impatient
> :). Accessing the BIOS through debug is easy once you know the proper
> address. The syntax from debug is "g=c800:5" with the "c800:5" being the
> address in the BIOS to start the formatting routine. Other addresses
> include c800:6, cc00:5, and cc00:6. On the Western Digital Super Bios,
you
> can set the drive parameters from the prompts and I don't know if the
> Adaptec will allow this or not. If you have jumper blocks, the drive
> parameters are most likely set with jumpers.
>
> I have found the easiest way to verify the address is to use the
unassemble
> command as there will always be a jmp instruction at the entry point in
the
> bios, i.e. uc800:5 and if there is no jmp instruction on the first line,
try
> another address. Good luck.
Adaptec is of no help that I could find. They only have stuff on the new
boards.
-Jason
***********************************************
* Jason Willgruber *
* (roblwill(a)usaor.net) *
* *
* http://members.tripod.com/general_1 *
* ICQ#-1730318 *
* /0\/0\ *
* > Long Live the 5170! *
* \___/ *
************************************************
----------
> From: Jim Strickland <jim(a)calico.litterbox.com>
> To: Discussion re-collecting of classic computers
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
> Subject: Re: Adaptec HD controller access?
> Date: Thursday, November 05, 1998 7:34 PM
>
> On the old adaptec controllers (at least the old 1542b I have) you have
to
> enter a sequence in debug to kick off the on-board bios. I'd look at
> adaptec's website for info on your board, they might even have the
manuals
> PDFd.
> --
> Jim Strickland
> jim(a)DIESPAMMERSCUMcalico.litterbox.com
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
> Vote Meadocrat! Bill and Opus in 2000 - Who ELSE is there?
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
< Sure. Tell the customer he/she will be down an extra hour while
< you extend the board to find the fault, desolder the chip
< and replace the 10 cent bus driver. Nope. Swapping was reality in the
< when I was there. Board level (early 80's DEC) was (unfortunately)
< replaced with shotgunning and option swap out by many in the late 80's.
Economics... less down time and the failed card could be returned for
repair and retest. Cards repaired under controlled conditions had better
reliability.
Option swap really used to fry me.
< Sure. Had one of those guys at Naval Air Propultion in Trenton, NJ.
< Customer: "The te16 won't go on line. U134 should go low, but it's floa
< Can you bring us a driver chip."
<
< Field Service: "We don't have it in stock, but I'll get one in the next
< three weeks if I P1 it... Or I could come down and change the LAW boar
< on the drive (LAW -- TE16 Logic and Write board) in about 15 minutes."
Reality was that it cost as much to handle the chip as the whole board!
< Absolutely. That's a very common failure along with the diode and cap
< on the VT100 video cards that's underrated.
Severely underrated. A 50V cap running at 70! The diode was a victim.
A remember a box of returned cards the size of a large chest refrigerator
at WJO01 in '84. I happen to look at it and after the third or forth card
surmized the failure... annoyed a few people that I could see that without
a full field study. Oh, the cause was a transmission error, the person
that drew up the BOM copied the wrong values. It would go years that way
before someone becuse of the problem would pull the original DD, CS, KPL
and see they didn't match. Classic case of why CADD was a desireable
thing.
Allison
Hi! I have an old Adaptec Hd controller that I'm trying to use in an IBM
PC (5150). Here's what it says on it:
adaptec, inc.
ASSY401406-00
REV K
I'm trying to find out how to get into the controller's BIOS so that I can
set up the HD (using DEBUG). There's two jumper blocks, and one single
jumper. I'm going to post a picture at:
<http://members.tripod.com/general_1/adaptec.jpg>
I'll try to get it posted in about 20 minutes.
ThAnX,
-Jason
***********************************************
* Jason Willgruber *
* (roblwill(a)usaor.net) *
* *
* http://members.tripod.com/general_1 *
* ICQ#-1730318 *
* /0\/0\ *
* > Long Live the 5170! *
* \___/ *
************************************************
If anyone has what this person needs, please email him at the email
address below:
-------------
Robert Stachowiak <admin(a)uapd.uakron.edu>
Akron, OH USA - Wednesday, November 04, 1998 at 18:12:02
If anyone might have the PC support PC install disk for an
IBM System 36, I can't find the one that we should have.
Should have link36.bat startrtr endrtr files on it.
I have the book, I have the install files for the 36 but not
for the pc's. Have to convert 5 or 6 years of data!
Thanks for any help!
Are you asserting that AIM65 = KIM-1 ???
- Mike: dogas(a)leading.net
-----Original Message-----
From: Sam Ismail <dastar(a)ncal.verio.com>
>You mean you don't remember my encased AIM65 that was on exhibit at the
>VCF? There's a picture of it up on Jim Willing's web site.
>> Oh yeah. I might scan it for people who missed it. Anyone interested?
> Sledgehammers being tossed at BillG? Sure! Now does the hammerthrower
> represent Sun, Netscape, Apple, or end-users?
> ObCC: Apple used to be known for cool ads, but those Think Good or
> whatever ads really grated on me. More sledgehammers, I say!
Same with me (but I laught a lot about the PII vs. PPC spot :).
Especialy this Think Different is a horror thing. And they
eventualy couldn't hold up their own arrogat idea of presenting
wordlewide unifying 'good' people, so, where is the idea ?
Gruss
H.
--
Ich denke, also bin ich, also gut
HRK
> Date: Tue, 3 Nov 1998 21:28:22 +0000 (GMT)
> From: ard(a)p850ug1.demon.co.uk (Tony Duell)
> To: classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu
> Subject: Re: PDP11 training troubleshooting
> Message-ID: <m0zao01-000IyTC@p850ug1>
> Content-Type: text
>
> > > Hmmm.. This actually wouldn't have worked for me, if I'd been allowed to
> > > do what I liked to the machine.
> >
> > Well, the class wasn't 8-(...
>
> You know, I've made some nasty comments about Field Service in the past
> (what DEC enthusiast hasn't...), but now I realise it wasn't all their
> fault. I mean, not being able to pull boards is terrible...
Yeah, but it taught you to think microcode, block diagram and
real troubleshooting instead of pul and swap.
I was a board swapper in the Field, but it made me an informed and
logical board swapper.
>
> God gave us extender boards (and DEC made extender boards) so you could
> run a CPU module outside the case to look at internal signals. It's a
> standard way of figuring it all out. Trying to debug an 11/45 only being
> able to look at backplane signals is horrible...
>
Sure. Tell the customer he/she will be down an extra hour while
you extend the board to find the fault, desolder the chip
and replace the 10 cent bus driver. Nope. Swapping was reality in the field
when I was there. Board level (early 80's DEC) was (unfortunately)
replaced with shotgunning and option swap out by many in the late 80's.
> Were you give (or allowed) a KM11 maintenance card? For those who've not
> seen one, it's a board (acutally 2 boards...) that you stick in special
> slot in some DEC machines. It's got 28 lights and 4 switches on it. In
> the 11/45 it'll let you single-step the microcode (or even the clock
> sequencer), display flag signals, etc. You can get the uPC on the panel,
> of course.
They were used in the 11/70 class, the RK05 maint class and a couple of
others. The 11 new hire used the 11/34's built in programmer panel
for much the same stuff.
> > >> However, in the real world I'm more likely to start with a 'lucky dip'.
> > >> Unplug all connectors/boards, clean contacts, look for bent pins. Check
> > >> all fuses. Power up and check the power rails with a voltmeter.
> > >
> > True... if you know someone's been playing inside. But in Field Service
>
> I'd check edge connector contacts _anyway_. Particularly if the fault
> seems to be totally crazy.
>
> > with machines under maintenance most folks keep their hands out of
> > them. (except for printers and terminals) This means something broke.
>
> Hmmm... OK, pity the poor field servoid who used to deal with the VAXen
> at one of the Universities I was at. He knew that there were DEC hackers
> there - people who read printsets for fun. The system manager was one
> such, and I joined in the fun.
>
> Typically, we'd call out field service with a call of the form 'Oh, it's
> gone again, and this time bring DEC part # <whatever>'. We'd already had
> the thing apart you see, and knew what we were doing. DEC didn't seem to
> mind too much - they'd bring the bit, do a few tests to confirm, and
> install it.
Sure. Had one of those guys at Naval Air Propultion in Trenton, NJ.
Customer: "The te16 won't go on line. U134 should go low, but it's floating.
Can you bring us a driver chip."
Field Service: "We don't have it in stock, but I'll get one in the next
three weeks if I P1 it... Or I could come down and change the LAW board
on the drive (LAW -- TE16 Logic and Write board) in about 15 minutes."
And then there was the site that complained about failing RK07 Dual port
diags on 11/70's when the drives ran flawlessly unde RSX11 and IAS.
The problem was race conditions in the diag. The diag was no longer being
updated. The only fix that got the field service folk off the site
was noop'ing the error calls on the tests with the race condition.
>
>
> > Check power and work from there.
>
> Oh, indeed. And ACLO/DCLO. Those cause more problems that you'd believe.
> Especially on H742 power supplies where C3 (I think) on the power control
> board goes open. ACLO and DCLO then get mains frequency ripple on them,
> and the rest is obvious.
>
> -tony
Absolutely. That's a very common failure along with the diode and cap
on the VT100 video cards that's underrated.
Bill
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Bill and/or Carolyn Pechter | pechter(a)shell.monmouth.com |
| Bill Gates is a Persian cat and a monocle away from being a villain in |
| a James Bond movie -- Dennis Miller |
+---------------------------------------------------------------------------+
--- Cameron Kaiser wrote:
::> Speaking of sledgehammers (way OT), did anyone see the artwork in last
::> week's Time with a picture of Bill Gates and someone running down the aisle
::> with a sledgehammer? An excellent photocollage for an article covering the
::> anti-trust proceedings.
::
::I didn't see it. Sounds like a parody of the Apple 1984 commercial?
Oh yeah. I might scan it for people who missed it. Anyone interested?
--- end of quote ---
Yes, that would be great. Thanks!
-- MB