majestyk wrote on 2022-06-06, 06:08:But it came without NPU?
It all depends on the current x-tal. If it´s a 40 MHz type everything was fine with Jp11 -> 1-2 and a 4 […]
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But it came without NPU?
It all depends on the current x-tal. If it´s a 40 MHz type everything was fine with Jp11 -> 1-2 and a 40 MHz 386. If you add a 25 MHz 387 it runs at 40 MHz also and gets overclocked.
Try it with a 20 MHz x-tal and Jp 11 -> 2-3.
Or - if it came with a 25 MHz NPU it was way overclocked and the 387 died at some point.
Or - the x-tal is 20 MHz, the x2 setting for the CPU is correct, but you just have a broken NPU.
The zip tie around the x-tal looks quite new. Normally those have turned a bit brownish on old 386 mainboards. Maybe - although all chips are original - someone tinkered with the x-tal?
Have you tried without L2 cache?
I haven't added anything - I received it with the coprocessor installed and this jumper was set to 2x. It's possible someone messed with that part of the board, since none of the system components/warranty stickers would have had to be removed (even the motherboard tray was stickered to the case - I was tempted to leave it all as it was just for the audacity of all those illegal stickers, but would rather have had everything get cleaned). With the Money Manager sticky note on the front, I could see where the coprocessor would have helped decades ago, lack of soundcard or anything else, and that all the expansion covers are matching and of similar finish/age, I don't think anyone was in here turning it into a retro box.
Still getting some of this verbiage down - so the x-tal you reference is the oscillator without markings. I'd have to buy another oscillator to try the parts swap, and I wouldn't know where to begin to source the part. It may be easier to just wait for the 40MHz chip to come in and install that as a test.
All the zip ties around the case looked good - I clipped a few after breaking all the stickers to take everything apart for cleaning. The system didn't look 35 years old, that's for sure - that's why I was happy to buy it for the price without seeing it run. I mostly wanted the case, so the hardware inside was a nice surprise.
I haven't removed the L2 cache, but I've tried disabling both cache levels in the BIOS to no effect on the FPU at POST time, but a big hit in non-FPU use.