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Toshiba T3200SX BIOS?

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First post, by HighTreason

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======
UPDATE
======

I have contacted the guy who runs the site linked below and it seems he may be willing to dump the BIOS from revision 003C provided I loan him the tools to do so which seems reasonable to me. So a solution to this may be within reach now.
== End of update ==

Does anybody have BIOS 003C or earlier?

I have 003I and cannot replace the hard drive until I can fix this. I have a dump of 003I if anyone wants to poke that around for some reason, taken right from an EEPROM Programmer as it seems impossible to make dumps work from in the machine itself.

There's a guy with a download but his dump is mislabeled and incomplete.

If somebody has the chip but cannot dump it, I may be willing to either gift them an EEPROM programmer or else pay them to send the chip over my way so I can dump and copy it myself... Pending evidence of ownership.

Here's the dump of 3I

Filename
3I-BIOS-DUMP.zip
File size
35.74 KiB
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213 downloads
File comment
Dump of the 003I BIOS
File license
Fair use/fair dealing exception

Here's that guys broken dump;
http://omolini.steptail.com/t3200sx/files.php
Try both in a HEX Editor, the first 64K dump in 1024K.ZIP is actually the start of the BIOS ROM.

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Reply 1 of 29, by new_castle_j

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I have a T3200SXC and was facing the same problem with replacing the hard drive. My solution was to install a network card with an empty ROM socket in one of the ISA slots and then I downloaded and burned an image of the XT-IDE bios. I inserted the newly burned ROM into the empty socket in the NIC and during POST changed the the onboard BIOS setting to "no hard disk". The XT-IDE bios enabled the onboard IDE controller to accept up to an 8GB hard drive. I am now running the system with an 8GB solid state IDE drive.

...now if I can only find some more of those Toshiba proprietary 2MB SIMM modules.

Reply 2 of 29, by HighTreason

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We actually fixed it and made a working one. I was waiting for Oliver to host the files himself and I'm meant to be mailing him a chip... As yet my new eraser isn't here though.

I discovered that the start of the EPROM is actually the VGA BIOS... Need to experiment further, but I have a mostly working 3C ROM, which can be located at ftp://mirror3dr.com/BIOS/Toshiba%20T3200SX/3C-BIOS-RE.BIN until it appears on http://omolini.steptail.com/t3200sx/

Mine runs regular SIMMS apparently, I think they are Parity SIMMs - discovered this when it was falsely reporting memory failure which may be a side-effect of this ROM in some circumstances. Obviously if anyone uses it I can't be held responsible for anything that might stop working...

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Reply 3 of 29, by new_castle_j

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That's awesome, I stumbled upon Oliver's site as well when I was researching a solution. I'm quite pleased with this machine, mine had a broken color screen that I was able to replace with a modern LED LCD. The case has lots of room inside and the retrofit worked very nicely.
I posted pictures here http://www.vintage-computer.com/vcforum/showt … ble-replacement

Mine came with 2 sticks of the Toshiba 2MB SIMMs and I have been able to successfully add 4 more standard SIMMs with parity. Each of the standard SIMMs are detected as 1MB, no matter what their actual capacity is. I've been able to install Slackware 4 and it runs well, but I will need a little more memory to get up to Slackware 7 which is where I want to be.

Reply 4 of 29, by HighTreason

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Much as I won't do it due to my screen working, I did look at whether I would be able to do that should it ever fail... Actually I did that before I bought it as I did not know if the screen was working, I got mine pretty much "as-seen" so it was nice that only the HDD was busted and a screw was rattling around inside that hadn't shorted anything out. Think I remember seeing that thread as I was still logged in there occasionally back then.

I have never been able to get SIMMs larger than 1MB so I wouldn't know about that... Annoying because my 386 desktop (486DLC-40) has slots and I want to upgrade the 8MB that is in there to 16MB... That thing gets really pissy about which simms are in too, if I put the current ones in with the manufacturer of the chips in the wrong order it won't start up.

My T3200 runs DOS 6.22... Or was it 7.10? Think it's 6.22 and WFW311. I use it to annoy people with some of my favorite DOS games when I'm not at home, want to add some wires and replace the internal speaker with a more powerful one, having the internal speaker output going to the SBPro and the SBPro running the speaker... Mono of course, but if I want stereo I can always plug headphones or speakers into the back of the card.

As for the BIOS, next on the agenda is merging the older system BIOS with the newer VGA BIOS... Trivial really, but my eraser isn't here and the people I bought it off are having to send another one.

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Reply 5 of 29, by jaZz_KCS

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Resurrecting this thread for future reference regarding the T3200SX.

Since HighTreason is not on this forum anymore apparently I just wanted to update this thread with new (now old) information regarding the BIOS and possible HDD substitutions for their Conner drives. While Conner drives with a capacity of under 1GB are mostly regarded as sturdy and reliable, they won't last forever.

Since HighTreason had successfully combined the most recent BIOS 03I with the HDD restrictions bits broken from version 03C, progress documentation and BIOS dumps are available from here --> http://omolini.steptail.com/t3200sx/files.php

The T3200SX in contrast to other models of this series (T3200 + T3200SXC) suffer from a rather hefty BIOS limitation present in any BIOS after revision 03C. Version 03C was the last BIOS that let you boot from any type of HDD (even if no Conner drive is detected). Later BIOS revisions simply refuse to boot from anything that does not have "CP" (Conner Peripherals) in the first bits of the name string.

Since this limitation was documented, the following solutions surfaced for this rather specific problem.

1] Using a Network bootable ISA card with a modded XT-IDE chip to circumvent the boot restriction and force it to boot from your desired IDE device.

2] Flashing the BIOS chip (which is thankfully socketed) to either the old version 03C or to a combination/hybrid of 03C and 03I that has been created by HighTreason (download on site above) (recommended)

3] You have BIOS 03C or older, you are golden.

4] Stick to original hardware (Conner drives) (if you happen to have one in the veins of CP-3044, don't even look at the eBay prices, I dare yeh)

What the old BIOS / modified hybrid BIOS does what the new BIOS doesn't:

With the old BIOS (up to version 03C) you are able to change the HDD type option in the BIOS regardless of the type of HDD connected. So you are able to "force" the HDD detection even if there is no Conner drive connected (for example a CF-adapter instead). If you connect a genuine HDD, it will result in you being able to use the first 40 MB of said HDD. To use the rest of space, or to make use of Adapter like CF/SD, overlay software then will do the rest for you (C/H/S translation).

With the newer BIOS versions the BIOS will simply lock the setting to "no HDD connected", if there is anything other connected than a Conner drive (either it looks for the specific model in the name string, or - as others have suggested, albeit this is not confirmed yet - it looks for the "CP" at the start of the idetity string).

There have been reports that there are other models from Toshiba of that era that suffer from the same type of limitation when it comes to HDDs. But as for the T3200 series, only the T3200SX seems to be affected.

Dropping this info here for other ppl and their possible future endeavors into these neat bulky plasma machines.

Reply 6 of 29, by OldCat

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Thanks for updating this thread for everyone else, jaZz_KCS!

My two cents: I had BIOS 003F in my Toshiba T3200SX and the only option for a hard drive was 931/15/17 (C/H/S) - 120Mb. As jaZz_KCS stated above, it would only accept Conner Peripherals HDD. After using BIOS provided by HighTreason (003C/003I HYBRID BIOS ROM with the improved 3I VGA BIOS) I now have two settings, similarly to 003C: normal (862/2/48) and alternate (695/7/17), both equal to 40Mb. The 120Mb one is gone.

I hope that if anyone comes looking for help in resurrecting these glorious beasts (jaZz_KCS' expression, but absolutely spot on) with modern hardware (SD/CF), they can use the info above.

Reply 7 of 29, by jaZz_KCS

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I was wondering whether an ISA I/O card with an IDE header would also be a suitable solution to the "only booting from Conner drives"-limitation. I wonder whether this limitation only applies to the IDE header on the mainboard.

Another model series also suffering from these limitations seems to be the T5200. More info in this thread. -->
A couple of retros I'm working on.

I am also currently fiddling around with an I/O card trying to get around the proprietary FDD (proprietary connector on FDD as well as cable). It still works, but God knows for how long. So I was wondering whether you could also use/boot from a genuine standard FDD connected to an I/O ISA card. I suspect the FDD to be working, but I want to know whether you would be able to boot from it as well.

If that works, once the original FDD dies I (and everybody else missing the original proprietary FDD drive) would be able to substitute the original FDD with a genuine replacement. (You would even be able to mount it in the same spot as the original drive, but the data connector instead going to your I/O ISA card. The power could be drained from the original proprietary FDD connector..

Last edited by jaZz_KCS on 2018-01-15, 12:27. Edited 1 time in total.

Reply 8 of 29, by jaZz_KCS

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Other models of the Toshiba T-series that seem to be affected by this limitation turn out to be the T2000 as well as the T5200.

Refer to this thread for more information regarding the T5200 --> A couple of retros I'm working on.

Reply 9 of 29, by jaZz_KCS

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So it turns out that IDE over ISA didn't work, but experiments with a normal non-proprietary FDD have actually been successful! 😀

I took out the proprietary floppy drive, put in the ISA I/O controller card and attached a normal floppy drive from Mitsumi on the controller's FDD connector. For now I powered it via an external 5V power source.
After booting, it worked. I was immediately able to boot from the floppy drive and use it normally like the proprietary one.

This is good news for anyone out there that has a T3200/5200 series with a broken proprietary floppy drive, as it means you can successfully replace it with a normal drive. The best thing is that there is a spare open space next to where the internal floppy drive sits that leads to the expansion card area in the back, which lets you neatly guide the FDD cable to the controller card in the back, internally (!). You can mount the replacement drive in the exact spot where the original drive was and neatly guide the FDD cable through this hole back to the controller card.

As for power, you only would need to find out which two pins from the proprietary floppy connector on the mainboard next to it give you the 5V power and then you could also power it internally.
All this makes it totally possible and viable to replace the proprietary FDD with a generic one.

Reply 10 of 29, by OldCat

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There is a similar thread here on Vogons, but focused on T5200: Toshiba T5200 mods and upgrades

I highly recommend everyone to have a look. Among other things, there is a description of how to connect regular floppy instead of proprietary one, without ISA I/O controller, just rewiring connectors - this can be useful for any Toshiba computer from this family (T3100, T3200, T5100 and T3200SX).

Reply 11 of 29, by jaZz_KCS

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New discoveries are being made regarding the T5200/T3200SX and T3200SXC which are accumulating in these two additional threads

Toshiba T5200 mods and upgrades

A couple of retros I'm working on.

Reply 12 of 29, by orinoko

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I have a Toshiba T6400DXC with the same HDD limitations - it only supports a '120MB' hard drive from the BIOS Setup. It has been a few years since I booted that machine (had to use floppy for everything), so I can't say what revision it has.

Annoyingly, regardless if you select '120MB' or 'No HDD' in the BIOS, it still tries to locate and init a hard drive on the IDE channel. It takes 2 mins for it to finally error out and continue to boot off floppy. Most annoying...

I wonder if there is a chance similar mods could be applied to it's BIOS... because even going the alternate route of a an XT-CF card would still mean that the BIOS would try to find a hard drive for 2 mins on boot anyway.

Reply 13 of 29, by Vipersan

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..IanB is yer man in this regard..
I'm sure he'd take a look at you bios when he has time.
In preperation for this I would suggest dumping you bios to floppy ..or better still ..reading the bios chip with a programmer if that is an option you have.
rgds
VS

Reply 14 of 29, by orinoko

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IanB hey? I swear, if he can get this thing to boot off a HDD, I would be most pleased 😀 this thing was the first 'laptop' I ever owned, back when I was 14 many years ago. Got it for $15 at a market. Apparently it cost $16,000 when it came out in 1992. Crazy...

I'll try and get a dump of the BIOS asap. Probably wouldn't be until next week some time though. Life and such!

Failing that, a friend of mine has a reader. He's 700km away, but I'm heading there soon anyway 😀

Thanks Vipersan!

Reply 15 of 29, by OldCat

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orinoko wrote:
IanB hey? I swear, if he can get this thing to boot off a HDD, I would be most pleased :) this thing was the first 'laptop' I ev […]
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IanB hey? I swear, if he can get this thing to boot off a HDD, I would be most pleased 😀 this thing was the first 'laptop' I ever owned, back when I was 14 many years ago. Got it for $15 at a market. Apparently it cost $16,000 when it came out in 1992. Crazy...

I'll try and get a dump of the BIOS asap. Probably wouldn't be until next week some time though. Life and such!

Failing that, a friend of mine has a reader. He's 700km away, but I'm heading there soon anyway 😀

Thanks Vipersan!

Not sure if Ian is activelly follwoing this thread - I think you should try to shout out to him in his T5200 thread: Toshiba T5200 mods and upgrades

Reply 16 of 29, by chozilla

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Sorry to wake up this thread,

Since I am quite new to this there is a lot of confusion on what to do and how to solve problems. I recently bought two half broken T3200SX and am combining them to one working system.
Unfortunately the system will not boot when I remove the HDD and only plug in a XT-CF-Lite v4.1 with xtide.

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Here are my initial questions and confusions:
1. Is it possible to run the Conner HDD and CF disk at the same time so i can backup the data? Tried to set the onboard controller in xtide, did find him but can not find the harddisk. Maybe i just have to remove a bootflag from one of the drives? not sure but if both are active the system stops in the xtide booting C> prompt and all options are a dead end.

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2. What hardware would i need to get - to get rid of the Conner and switch to CF, maybe even use the internal ports from the onboard controller? EEPROM writer, empty bios chip, etc? Can the onboard ide support two CF cards on IDE on one Cable (master/slave)?

I got the Conner Disk from one System working and found some interesting Industrial software (probably automotive) that I want to have a closer look at combined with two custom ISA cards. That machine was apparently run until 1999 and has a working (maybe not stock?) FDD from Panasonic.

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best reg4rds for the help
\ chozilla

Reply 17 of 29, by Jo22

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Hi, chozilla, I don't have got a T3200SX but maybe I can answer a few of the questions. ^^

chozilla wrote:

Unfortunately the system will not boot when I remove the HDD and only plug in a XT-CF-Lite v4.1 with xtide.

So it booted from the original HDD, at least ? If so, that's good. ^^

chozilla wrote:

I got the Conner Disk from one System working and found some interesting Industrial software (probably automotive)
that I want to have a closer look at combined with two custom ISA cards. That machine was apparently run until 1999 and has a
working (maybe not stock?) FDD from Panasonic.

I see. I assume Conner Disk is a HDD.. I remember that brand, because..
a) I had got one myself in the 90s.
b) People often misspell the brand as Connor (in reference to John Connor from Terminator movies). 😉

Anyway, if the system still boots with the original HDD and the floppy drive still works,
you can copy over some programs and establish a serial connection (null-modem) and transfer
your programs over the network. A few programs that I know of are Norton Commander (starting with v3 ? Or was it v5?),
Ultrafast Filetransfer Operation (Upward Systems), File Maven, COMDrive and COMX.

At least with File Maven, I got a working serial connection once between a 286 and a modern PC w/ DOSBox+USB-RS232 adapter.

Alternatively, you can try to use a parallel ZIP drive for file transfer.
I read quite a few times that they are successfully used by the XT people here.

chozilla wrote:

Here are my initial questions and confusions:
1. Is it possible to run the Conner HDD and CF disk at the same time so i can backup the data?
Tried to set the onboard controller in xtide, did find him but can not find the harddisk.

In theory, yes. As far I know, the XT-IDE card uses the I/O addresses that were common in PC/XT systems.
So it shouldn't collide with the AT standard ports. However, I don't know if the XTIDE Univeral BIOS (XT)
can coexit with the IDE/ST506-code that's in charge in AT-BIOSes the same way the XTIDE Univeral BIOS (AT) can.
(The AT-Version, "Large" at least, of XT-IDE BIOS can give control back to the original AT-BIOS code, e.g. you can press
a button an let the BIOS boot from HDD.)

chozilla wrote:

2. What hardware would i need to get - to get rid of the Conner and switch to CF, maybe even use the internal ports from the onboard controller? EEPROM writer, empty bios chip, etc? Can the onboard ide support two CF cards on IDE on one Cable (master/slave)?

Not sure if I can answer that. I think the answer is "yes". Normally, even the oldest IDE interface can (physically) handle two hard disks.
It's a bus, after all. However, Toshiba might had made some restrictions I'm not aware of. 🙁
If it didn't, XTIDE Universal BIOS should be able to handle that. It allows for up to four IDE controllers.

Best regards,
Jo22

"Time, it seems, doesn't flow. For some it's fast, for some it's slow.
In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel

//My video channel//

Reply 18 of 29, by OldCat

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chozilla wrote:
Sorry to wake up this thread, […]
Show full quote

Sorry to wake up this thread,

[...]
2. What hardware would i need to get - to get rid of the Conner and switch to CF, maybe even use the internal ports from the onboard controller? EEPROM writer, empty bios chip, etc? Can the onboard ide support two CF cards on IDE on one Cable (master/slave)?

I got the Conner Disk from one System working and found some interesting Industrial software (probably automotive) that I want to have a closer look at combined with two custom ISA cards. That machine was apparently run until 1999 and has a working (maybe not stock?) FDD from Panasonic.

[...]

No need to be sorry, that's what this thread is about. As for your other questions, I'll defer to jaZz_KCS and others, as I have no experience whatsoever with XT-IDE. That said, I can help with question 2.

I got rid of Conner drive and have a CF card instead. It's very comfortable!

In order to do that:
1. downloaded 003C/003I HYBRID BIOS ROM from here: http://omolini.steptail.com/t3200sx/files.php
2. programmed chip with BIOS using local electronics shop as I do not have the EEPROM writer. Used this particular chip EPROM 27C1024 DIL40 (UV) AMD 70ns (latency needs to be below 85ns). It all cost under 10EUR together with the chip.
3. carefully removed BIOS chip from motherboard, put newly programmed chip inside.
4. connected IDE cable and IDE to CF adapter in order to check if it is going to work. It did.
5. once set-up, I used rear-mounted IDE to CF Adapter Card with a PCI Bracket to put CF card in accessible spot (one of the ISA expansion slots in the back) so that I don't have to open Toshiba in order to add something on the card. I had external help with that, as the assembly was not easy.

Let me know if you need more pictures.

That's how it looks now:

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Reply 19 of 29, by chozilla

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Thanks for the Information so fare.

Still struggling a bit with the HDD and the CF working together without patching the onboard bios yet.
Will try the Anydrive patch next and then move on to figuring out how to get a null-modem or proper networking set up.

If i go for the bios solution shouldn't I pick on of the patched versions from this post? (Toshiba T5200 mods and upgrades)
Finding a 27C1024 with less than 120 ns is quite hard i feel. Will I also need special cables to connect the CF Socket with the onboard IDE (since it has more pins?)

Once I got the bios working will any IDE-44 to CF adapter work?

reg4rds
\ chozilla