NightSprinter wrote:Unfortunately I cannot get it to recognize the 4x CD-ROM that came with it (regardless of whether I use the board's IDE ports or the built-in one on the Reveal K2Y-PRO16 card that came with the machine).
Let's try to fix this first... What exactly do you mean with 'recognize'? The CD-ROM drive does not show up anywhere at bootup or in the BIOS setup? This is perfectly normal on 486 and early Pentium machines, as their IDE controllers weren't ATAPI compliant and couldn't boot from CD-ROM. A connected CDROM drive will not show up until you load the drivers.
A few hints:
- Forget about the soundcard or other add-in cards (too much stuff to go wrong). Use the IDE ports on the mainboard.
- Check and re-check the IDE cable connection between the board and the drive. Old boards and drives don't have plastic guides around the connector pins, it's awfully easy to plug the cable the wrong way around or missing a whole pin row, especially when many connectors are cramped in a small area.
- Jumper the CDROM as master and hook it up as a single drive. IDE specs were not well-defined back in the days, so often two drives refused to work together on the same IDE channel.
- If it still doesn't work, try a newer CDROM drive.
About early PCI boards:
All 486 and first-generation Pentium PCI chipsets were buggy in some way. The Intel Saturn chipset needed three revisions until it was useable without crashing, and the other chipsets were not much better. Common problems were busmastering and burst-mode timing, most boards were "fixed" by simply turning these features off, resulting in lame performance. Typical PCI cards at that time had incomplete configuration space entries or did not decode addresses correctly.
Another 486-specific problem was the bus speed: Pentium systems (up to SuperSocket 7) simply halved the FSB, resulting in PCI clocks of 25, 30 or 33 MHz, all within spec. On 486 board designs the host and PCI clock rate was the same, which could be as low as 16 MHz and reach up to 50 MHz. Popular AMD chips (DX2-80, DX4-120) had a 40 MHz host clock, which caused instabilities on the PCI bus.
A common buyer advice in the mid-nineties: Forget about Pentium and PCI, get a DX4 with VLB instead. This was valid until 1996/1997, when the second-generation Pentium chipsets (i430FX/HX/VX) became mainstream.
I've never used a ALI M1487 board myself, but it is reputed to be one of the better 486 chipsets. Unlike the others, it supports PCI 2.1, and it was late on the market, so it may have fewer PCI quirks.