Reply 420 of 423, by Chkcpu
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sizzlinbeef wrote on 2026-05-31, 17:17:Yes, jumpering JV6 gets the correct 2.5v. […]
Chkcpu wrote on 2026-05-30, 19:51:First close only JV6 and check if you indeed get 2.5V Vcore. Then also close JV7 and check the voltage. Depending on how the JV6 […]
First close only JV6 and check if you indeed get 2.5V Vcore.
Then also close JV7 and check the voltage. Depending on how the JV6/JV7/JV8 resistor network is connected, you will see the Vcore either go down or go up.
Repeat the experiment with all other JV6/JV7/JV8 combinations.If the voltage goes up with more than one JV6/7/8 jumper closed, a final test with all three JV6/7/8 jumpers open may reveal the lower Vcore you want to find.
I hope this procedure is clear and I’m curious what you will find.
Happy testing,
JanYes, jumpering JV6 gets the correct 2.5v.
6-7 closed 1.93v
6-7-8 closed 1.73v
7-8 closed 2.04v
6-8 closed 1.95vUnfortunately I can't confirm any of these result in a working system. I tried booting this board before testing. Using default settings for a pentium MMX (I tried a 166, 200, 233), can't get the thing to post. No video output. Tried different VGA, RAM, deoxit on all slots, alcohol clean, etc. I think time has taken it's toll on something on the board. It may be related to getting 3.6v on the VIO transistor when it should be 3.3v with JV1 and 2 open and JV3 set to 2-3. It has been probably a decade since I last tried booting it, so not surprising.
Thanks for reporting your test values.
So a 2.2V setting was not among them, but you found a nice 2.04V setting for a K6-2+! 😀
I’m sorry to hear the board won’t boot. The CMOS backup battery inside the DALLAS or BENCHMARQ RTC chip is probably dead. This sometimes causes a board to stall early during the Power-On-Self-Test.
Do you have a POST analyzer card to see where the boot process hangs?
Cheers, Jan