Today this build has made a leap forward but it wasn't the intention when I started out, I was just going to make a small improvement.
I was a bit tierd of having to listen to the somewhat loud sound the Maxtor 71080AP (1080MB) HDD I use in this system make and I also wanted some more space for games and stuff.
With the newest non Plug and Play BIOS the Asus PVI-486SP3 does not like larger HDDs, thankfully it isn't stuck at the 504MB limit but anything over 1GB is hit and miss and when testing all my spare suitable sub 8GB HDDs the largest one the BIOS would detect correctly was a Quantum Fireball 1700AT (1707MB). This HDD is reasonable quiet and in good working order, I made a surface scan in the Asus PVI-486SP3 system just to be sure and everything was fine.
These are the drives in question.
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The next issue was transferring the system to this HDD with my Norton Ghost software. I could not get my main system with an EVGA SR-2 motherboard to boot with an old AT drive connected to the on board VIA controller handling the onboard IDE so I had to resort to this low quality IDE to USB thingymabob I found in one of my "random crap" boxes.
The IDE to USB thingymabob.
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The thingymabob would only detect the HDD if I first connected power to the HDD, then really fast connected the thingymabob to the HDD and then the USB cable to the computer. If I tried to do it in any other order the HDDs would not even spin up or the HDD would not get detected. In any case this seemed to work, at least when I got the timing right. I could create an image of the Maxtor drive with Norton Ghost and write the image to the Quantum drive.
I connected the Quantum drive to the Asus PVI-486SP3, booted with a floppy and did a "sys c:" without issues. I could boot from the drive and everything seemed to work but when using the system I started to get read errors and when doing a surface scan I found that the drive was now littered with bad sectors. That's what I get for trying to image old HDDs with a cheap USB to IDE thingymabob.
As I do not own another HDD larger than the 1080MB Maxtor drive that will work with the latest BIOS supported by the old flash chip with 12V programming voltage my board is equipped with I was getting a bit irritated by this point. By changing the flash chip to a SST PH29EE010 or Winbond W29EE01 chip with 5V programming voltage a newer PNP BIOS that won't work the the 12V chip because of some strange incompatibility (not the BIOS size) can be used. This newer BIOS should with luck support larger drives.
I did a quick Ebay search and found that I would have to pay $12 with shipping for the cheapest SST PH29EE010 as the Chinese diddn't seem to have any and I could not find any Winbond W29EE01 chips at all. Spending $12 and having to wait days or even weeks sucks so instead I checked some motherboards in the first random box with motherboards I happend to stumble on in one of my storage units. I found this Shuttle? i440LX board with a Winbond W29EE011 chip. Only a single digit difference, close enough!
The donor i440LX board, probably a Shuttle HOT something.
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Next I tried to find my "flash chip programmer", a i430VX motherboard with the BIOS chip easy accessible at a corner making it easy to hotflash. It turned out that I have no clue where that motherboard is, it's at least not where it should be. I decided to use the Asus PVI-486SP3 to program the new BIOS chip. The manual would not tell me the correct position to put JP32 and JP33 to get 5V flash programming voltage but trusty old TH99 listed the jumper settings (JP32 1-2, JP33 2-3).
"Hotflashing" is always exciting, even more so when the motherboard is mounted in a case. Luckily everything went perfectly fine and my Asus PVI-486SP3 now sports the 0307 PNP BIOS with Y2K fixes. I hope this BIOS will support larger HDDs but this BIOS will also let me run an AMD 5x86 P75 CPU! I dont know if I will upgrade the CPU permanently but I will at least do some benching with the 5x86 P75. 😀
The new BIOS chip in place without the magic smoke escaping!
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So far so good!
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😀
Edit
Now a "quiet" Western Digital Caviar 22500 (2559.8 MB) HDD gets detected correctly! I think I will transfer the system to the new HDD without fancy ghost software and USB to IDE thingymabobs this time, lesson learned! 😀
/Edit
New PC: i9 12900K @5GHz all cores @1.2v. MSI PRO Z690-A. 32GB DDR4 3600 CL14. 3070Ti.
Old PC: Dual Xeon X5690@4.6GHz, EVGA SR-2, 48GB DDR3R@2000MHz, Intel X25-M. GTX 980ti.
Older PC: K6-3+ 400@600MHz, PC-Chips M577, 256MB SDRAM, AWE64, Voodoo Banshee.