Reply 60 of 283, by LocalBus
snufkin wrote on 2022-01-28, 19:55:Ok, so if we use the Award ISA/EISA BIOS Version 4.0 entry from bioscentral, then with no memory installed it gives C1 BE (thank […]
Ok, so if we use the Award ISA/EISA BIOS Version 4.0 entry from bioscentral, then with no memory installed it gives C1 BE (thanks PC@LIVE), so it's completed chipset initialisation and fails on memory size check. Which makes sense. Then with memory installed it fails on 0B 0A, so it's completed initialise keyboard and fails on "CMOS Checksum ; video interface initialised" (video memory and video adapter still to come). 0B often seems to be something CMOS related. Q1&Q2 might be something to do with voltage supply for the CMOS?
If you haven't already got it figured out, any chance of photos showing the top and back of the area around those transistors, and of the flat face of the transistor?
[edit: circuit looks a bit like this (from the 82C206 datasheet:
82C206_BatteryCircuit.jpg
]
Yes this is very much in line with the circuit that I am facing.
Q1 is in fact not shorted but directly related to the CMOS reset jumper JP11.
Edit: or maybe there is a short still, continuity mode vs diode mode is tricking me here. I just have to desolder both Q1 and C42 to be sure.
Q1 is what junctions current from the battery to CMOS RAM.
However, regardless of its jumper position, C42 still reads a short so I will desolder that bad boy first.
Boy it takes time for the CMOS voltage to go down when it is floating. And I think due to this short, there is no means to short this to ground via JP11, and thus never resets properly?
Getting closer 😀