Off hand, I wonder if the 486 doesn?t support logical block addressing in the BIOS (or its
not enabled). Modern machines (and those of a Windows 95 vintage) do not use CHS
addressing (cylinder, head, sector) any longer.
SD cards usually don?t return Sector errors because of the dynamic remapping the firmware
does.
Rich
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________________________________
From: cctech <cctech-bounces at classiccmp.org> on behalf of W2HX via cctech
<cctech at classiccmp.org>
Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 5:39:57 PM
To: cctech at
classiccmp.org <cctech at classiccmp.org>
Subject: IDE-SD adapter question
Hi all,
Thanks for previous help on this project. I am working on an old 486 computer and I have
replaced a 40 pin IDE hard drive with this SD adapter...
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07G29TZPS/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o01…
In general it seems to mostly be working. I can see a directory listing of several
thousands files located on a 2GB SD card from yesteryear. The SD card was new when I
installed it (has been in my possession for years).
However, I do get errors "sector not found" and if I A)bort I get INT 24 error.
I am trying to get windows 95 installed and this is certainly preventing that.
In the BIOS settings I have the hard drive set as "USER" and these parameters:
CY:[1024] HD:[16] ST:[63] LZ:[1024] WP:[0]
These were the parameters in use while I was still using the actual hard drive.
Question 1: Now that I am using an SD card instead of an IDE drive, what, if anything,
should I be doing with these BIOS parameters?
Question 2: The BIOS has an option to format the hard drive. Should I format the SD card
using this facility?
I did not explicitly put a filesystem on that SD card. I placed it in a windows 7 machine,
it was recognized, and I began copying files to it. I then place the SD card into the 486
machine where I saw the sector not found errors.
Any advice how to proceed?
Thanks
Eugene