OK...let's get these things sorted...
First... I'm almost always busy as we all are, i guess. So let's make a plan and/or set conditions to save time.
But first for me...vacation...until next week's sunday (If you wonder that I maybe don't answer)!
@PcBytes:
I would create spec pages for every motherboard, if I had the time, but that's unrealistic, unfortunately - so let's focus on ABIT. BTW I already have a spec page for Syntax SV266A as I own it myself for ~20 years. BTW2 i have all latest BIOSes and manuals for Syntax motherboards and notebooks available for download on my website (-> https://soggi.org/motherboards/syntax.htm).
Please wait with posting pictures/photographs... Unfortunately your pictures aren't good enough 🙁. Taking photos with flash is a bad idea in the most cases. Take the time and take the photos when you have good lighting from daylight. It is important to me that I can read the printings on very small ICs. If it's not possible to reach the goal with one photo, then take some detail photos. Important ICs are (as mentioned above) Super I/O, PLL/clock gen, AC'97 codec, PWM/Buck controller, IDE/SCSI (RAID) controller, Firewire controller, hardware monitoring chips...simply said all the chips which have some kind of higher logic in it and aren't just simple resistors, caps, MOSFETs or drivers and stuff.
From your list I'm interested in almost all (except BP6 and VP6 which I own myself).
@nd22:
You don't need to brag about it... What you have IS a respectable collection! 😀
nd22 wrote on 2024-08-30, 08:46:
Also during testing I found very often that official specs are not what actually works on the hardware - despite what the manual or the BIOS version mentions so I think we can work together to put up "final specs": type and size of memory supported, CPU supported, etc.
This is exactly what I found out about specific hardware and you could hit it even more bad... ABIT/abit is OK with these issues - have a look on MSI, they even don't get it that they have two different versions of their P35 Neo with the need of two different BIOSes because they used two different PLLs/clock gens.
nd22 wrote on 2024-08-30, 08:46:
I do not have a camera, all I got is a smartphone but I think I can borrow some professional equipment for high res photos; as for the manuals I got most of them from the internet.
Currently I am working on testing all socket 462 generations of CPU's so maybe we can start with that?
So when do we start? 😀 PS: I am very excited!
Today's smartphone's cameras are really OK for taking photos of motherboards (or it's components / ICs, if you don't get a good photo of the whole board). As said above, I don't need high res pics for illustration on my spec pages - I need them to identify components on the boards and finally to provide the appropriate drivers and stuff on the spec pages.
Finally let me show you how good photos or scans should look like. The user havli has great high-res pics on his website http://hw-museum.cz/ .
kind regards
soggi
Vintage BIOSes, firmware, drivers, tools, manuals and (3dfx) game patches -> soggi's BIOS & Firmware Page
soggi.org on Twitter - inactive at the moment