I tried to use an IDE->8 GB CF Card combo that successfully worked in a couple of 386 Compaq Deskpro machines. On the Fieldworks unit, the BIOS could see the drive, but I could not write to the CF Card. I tried smaller cards, none of them worked. I then put XTBIOS onto an EPROM and put it into the 3C509 board that I have in this machine, however, it doesn't do anything. I suspect it is because the board has a PCI HDD controller.
Damn this FieldWorks machine feels dodgy, no LBA in the BIOS and weird behaviour with drives that aren't CHS/ATA. I really wish there was a BIOS update for this machine, but I can't find one. The Pentium version came out around the time this machine was new, so I doubt there was much interest in updating it. The BIOS currently installed is PhoenixBIOS A486 v1.03 1994 and an additional Fieldworks BIOS 1.1.2 11/10/95.
EDIT: oh dear, I put the original HDD back in and accidentally put the connector offset to the left by one column of pins and I got a weird beeping, turned it off, opened it up and I got the whiff of magic smoke.
The HDD no longer spins. D'oh! Putting the HDD onto the PC and I can read/write to it, so the drive is OK.
It seems the motherboard no longer functions with IDE, something let go, smell-o-vision seems to be somewhere around Q8 area. No idea what Q8 is, but looking at the tracks around it, perhaps some kind of MOSFET? I think the +5V motor pin got shorted to ground by the FUBAR with the cable.
I have never been able to find schematics for this machine, so repair is going to be tough (although not impossible) if the IDE controller has died, that is a lot more work in both repair and parts sourcing. In future, I will put a blanking pin into the cable to stop stupid things like this destroying an otherwise working system.
EDIT2: I figured out the logo was for a long gone company called "Siliconix" it was bought out by Vishay gradually from 1997 to 2005. On the upside, I know what it is, a P-channel MOSFET (data sheet attached) hopefully that is all that I killed...
EDIT3: A modern replacement appears to be available from the same manufacturer - SI9407BDY-T1-E3 - the major difference being pin #1 is now source rather than N/C and it's RoHS, yay!
EDIT4: I found a 44 pin IDE pinout and yup, putting the connector one out away from pin #1 i.e. pin #1 is now connected to pin #3 from the PC. That connects (pin #41) Logic +5V to ground (pin #43) via ground pins #24 & #26 and poooof goes the MOSFET.
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