envagyok wrote on 2023-01-19, 08:53:
I check it. Sratches isnt problem, no discontinuities.
A12-A31 and B12 is connected to Tekram Chip, A2-A9 is connected to Goldstar Floppy controller.
Also, A31 to B22 is connected to the Goldstar floppy controller, and those connections are obviously OK, as the floppy controller works. Furthermore, A2-A9 is also connected to the Tekram chip. Those traces look fine.
envagyok wrote on 2023-01-19, 08:53:
Here is a photo from checkit:
That photo shows that the card does not seem to respond to ROM cycles at any address. The only lines required for the TRM680C to detect ROM requests are A12-A31 (address lines) and B12 (memory read request), and you checked those. Even if one of the data lines (A2-A9) were broken, you should see something in CheckIt. If the design of the DC-680C is similar to the DC-680T (the earlier variant, which I own), there is a small stub ROM integrated into the TRM680C chip, which is enabled under firmware control (for 2.x firmware), whereas 1.x firmware required an external host ROM. The 680C still has the solder positions for a ROM chip and an 8-bit buffer chip near the GoldStar, but as it never shipped with 1.x firmware, these components were not populated.
If the firmware was corrupted, the integrated stub ROM is possibly not enabled, but we know that the firmware works and passes its internal checksum test, because we observed correct behaviour with and without cache RAM, so it is highly unlikely that the firmware is corrupted. So I am out of ideas why your computers do not see the ROM.