First post, by l.neidlinger
I've dug up this old Pionex 486 system and have been trying to get it running. So far it has been rebuffing all my advances.
The motherboard is a Biostar MB1433/50-AEA-V. For some reason it is refusing to see the A:\ drive.
I replaced the Dallas clock chip with a new drop in replacement that uses a coin cell. It now keeps bios settings just fine. I have drive A: set as a 1.44m 3.5 floppy, and the drive is plugged into the end connector, past the twist in the cable. However in this configuration I get absolutely nothing from the floppy, it doesn't try to seek or anything.
I tried swapping out the cable for a known good one, no change.
If I set drive A: to not installed, set drive B: to a 1.44m 3.5 floppy and plug the drive into the drive B: plug on the cable, I get a seek out of it, but still get a "Diskette Boot Failure Insert Boot Diskette into A:" and it will refuse to read from the B: drive
If I set drive A: to a 1.44m 3.5 floppy and set drive B: to a 1.44m 3.5 floppy with both actually installed, I get an "A: drive error" during post, followed by the same Diskette boot failure error as above after hitting F1 to continue.
I tried replacing the Super I/O card with a Promise DC200 I had laying around that has a floppy controller, but I get the exact same behavior with that card, in addition to the HD controller not wanting to work with it either. The HD controller in the super i/o card seems to work just fine and detects the 1gb CF card no problem. I have tried the above with the CF card removed as well.