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DIY Bios Modding guide Jan Steunebrink k6-2+/3+ 128gb

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Reply 260 of 282, by Babasha

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Chkcpu wrote on 2025-07-29, 19:35:
Hi Babasha, […]
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Babasha wrote on 2025-07-28, 21:02:
Hi all!)) […]
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Hi all!))

Currently i write a little arcticle about VIA VPX boards and Intel 430TX boards comparision.
On my way i patch BIOS for my PCPartner VIB804DS (35-8804) with BIOS patcher in two ways:

1) first version - apply all patches and get nice results with AMD K6-2/500 CPU (good speed, no IDE limits, correct CPU and its speed in MHz POST), but this version is not best with AMD K6-2/450 (here i lost percentage in speed)

2) second version - apply all patches except "New koeffs support" and it gives me best speed result on AMD K6-2/500 and AMD K6-2/450, no IDE limits BUT CPU SPEED DURING POST ALWAYS SHOWED AS 400MHZ(((

Can someone look inside patched version and answer me is it possible to show correct CPU speed during post WITHOUT speed lost?

Thnx!

Hi Babasha,

Strange that “New koeffs support” in the BIOS Patcher tool doesn’t work well when patching the VIB804DS “BIOS-L (80619)” version. I don’t know why that is.

However, you are in luck because your VIB804DS board uses the LGS Super IO and there is a Release 4.2 eSupport upgrade BIOS for LGS IO available for your board on TRW.
https://theretroweb.com/motherboards/s/pcpart … ds-35-8804#bios

This Rel. 4.2 BIOS supports all Socket 7 CPUs ever made, and has all HDD size limits and UDMA bugs fixed. So you don’t have to use a patched BIOS.

Please let us know if this eSupport BIOS works better on your board.
Cheers, Jan

Hi!
I already try all BIOS'es for my mobo inc. eSupport 2004 version.
Its sad eSupport 2004 is rich-function one while been one of the slowest in DOS and W98 too with AMD K6-2/450 and AMD K6-2/500. I Try to repatch it too but its gain intermediate performane boost compared to "my" patched version.

Need help? Begin with photo and model of your hardware 😉

Reply 261 of 282, by Chkcpu

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Babasha wrote on 2025-07-30, 06:13:
Hi! I already try all BIOS'es for my mobo inc. eSupport 2004 version. Its sad eSupport 2004 is rich-function one while been one […]
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Chkcpu wrote on 2025-07-29, 19:35:
Hi Babasha, […]
Show full quote
Babasha wrote on 2025-07-28, 21:02:
Hi all!)) […]
Show full quote

Hi all!))

Currently i write a little arcticle about VIA VPX boards and Intel 430TX boards comparision.
On my way i patch BIOS for my PCPartner VIB804DS (35-8804) with BIOS patcher in two ways:

1) first version - apply all patches and get nice results with AMD K6-2/500 CPU (good speed, no IDE limits, correct CPU and its speed in MHz POST), but this version is not best with AMD K6-2/450 (here i lost percentage in speed)

2) second version - apply all patches except "New koeffs support" and it gives me best speed result on AMD K6-2/500 and AMD K6-2/450, no IDE limits BUT CPU SPEED DURING POST ALWAYS SHOWED AS 400MHZ(((

Can someone look inside patched version and answer me is it possible to show correct CPU speed during post WITHOUT speed lost?

Thnx!

Hi Babasha,

Strange that “New koeffs support” in the BIOS Patcher tool doesn’t work well when patching the VIB804DS “BIOS-L (80619)” version. I don’t know why that is.

However, you are in luck because your VIB804DS board uses the LGS Super IO and there is a Release 4.2 eSupport upgrade BIOS for LGS IO available for your board on TRW.
https://theretroweb.com/motherboards/s/pcpart … ds-35-8804#bios

This Rel. 4.2 BIOS supports all Socket 7 CPUs ever made, and has all HDD size limits and UDMA bugs fixed. So you don’t have to use a patched BIOS.

Please let us know if this eSupport BIOS works better on your board.
Cheers, Jan

Hi!
I already try all BIOS'es for my mobo inc. eSupport 2004 version.
Its sad eSupport 2004 is rich-function one while been one of the slowest in DOS and W98 too with AMD K6-2/450 and AMD K6-2/500. I Try to repatch it too but its gain intermediate performane boost compared to "my" patched version.

Hi Babasha,

Weird, the 2004 eSupport BIOS is the most advanced and should give you the best performance, not the lowest.

I got curious to where these performance differences come from, so in the 86Box emulator I experimented a bit with the original 0619 BIOS and the BIOS Patcher versions, both with and without the New Koeffs support patch.
However, I didn’t find any difference in chipset programming that could explain a difference in timing settings for L2 cache or RAM.

Can you explain how you measured these performance differences?
I’m also curious about the board setup:
- Did you use the Setup defauts in the BIOS, or Manually optimized settings?
- How much RAM was installed?
- Which memory sticks were used; FPM, EDO, or SDRAM?
- What was the CPU setting? Was it 6x75 for the K6-2/450 and 6x83 for the K6-2/500?

Thanks in advance for answering these question.

Regards, Jan

CPU Identification utility
The Unofficial K6-2+ / K6-III+ page

Reply 262 of 282, by Babasha

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Chkcpu wrote on 2025-08-01, 10:02:
Hi Babasha, […]
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Babasha wrote on 2025-07-30, 06:13:
Hi! I already try all BIOS'es for my mobo inc. eSupport 2004 version. Its sad eSupport 2004 is rich-function one while been one […]
Show full quote
Chkcpu wrote on 2025-07-29, 19:35:
Hi Babasha, […]
Show full quote

Hi Babasha,

Strange that “New koeffs support” in the BIOS Patcher tool doesn’t work well when patching the VIB804DS “BIOS-L (80619)” version. I don’t know why that is.

However, you are in luck because your VIB804DS board uses the LGS Super IO and there is a Release 4.2 eSupport upgrade BIOS for LGS IO available for your board on TRW.
https://theretroweb.com/motherboards/s/pcpart … ds-35-8804#bios

This Rel. 4.2 BIOS supports all Socket 7 CPUs ever made, and has all HDD size limits and UDMA bugs fixed. So you don’t have to use a patched BIOS.

Please let us know if this eSupport BIOS works better on your board.
Cheers, Jan

Hi!
I already try all BIOS'es for my mobo inc. eSupport 2004 version.
Its sad eSupport 2004 is rich-function one while been one of the slowest in DOS and W98 too with AMD K6-2/450 and AMD K6-2/500. I Try to repatch it too but its gain intermediate performane boost compared to "my" patched version.

Hi Babasha,

Weird, the 2004 eSupport BIOS is the most advanced and should give you the best performance, not the lowest.

I got curious to where these performance differences come from, so in the 86Box emulator I experimented a bit with the original 0619 BIOS and the BIOS Patcher versions, both with and without the New Koeffs support patch.
However, I didn’t find any difference in chipset programming that could explain a difference in timing settings for L2 cache or RAM.

Can you explain how you measured these performance differences?
I’m also curious about the board setup:
- Did you use the Setup defauts in the BIOS, or Manually optimized settings?
- How much RAM was installed?
- Which memory sticks were used; FPM, EDO, or SDRAM?
- What was the CPU setting? Was it 6x75 for the K6-2/450 and 6x83 for the K6-2/500?

Thanks in advance for answering these question.

Regards, Jan

Thnx or the info!

1) Next Monday i will prepare table with the benchmarks results for: BIOS-L (80619), eSupport 2004 and BIOS-L (80619) patched with BP 4.23 (with and without "New Koeffs support")
2) Will attach BIOS settings too
3) 128MB
4) SDRAM by Kingston KVR133X64C2/128 PC133 CL2 module
5) CPU settings for K6-2/450AFX - 6x75, for K6-2/450AFX - 6x83

I measure DOS performance by SPEEDSYS 4.78 and port of Quake2 for DOS, in W98 by Sisoft Sandra 2001 and Quake2 ver. 3.20

Here the sample of my measurements - https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1_T0_r … of=true&sd=true

Need help? Begin with photo and model of your hardware 😉

Reply 263 of 282, by Chkcpu

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Chkcpu wrote on 2025-05-14, 07:55:

The ECS P5TX-B Rev 2.0 is another matter. I couldn’t find any later BIOS than the V2.1 from 04/25/1997 either. So this one needs to be patched.
I’ve put it on my list, but it may take several months before I can start working on it. I have a lot of other (BIOS) projects to finish first. 😉

Cheers, Jan

Hi pappyN4,

Just a short note to let you know I've started working on the ECS P5TX-B Rev 2.0 BIOS.
I should have it ready in a few days and will send you a PM with the patched BIOS then.

Greetings, Jan

CPU Identification utility
The Unofficial K6-2+ / K6-III+ page

Reply 264 of 282, by Babasha

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Chkcpu wrote on 2025-08-01, 10:02:
Hi Babasha, […]
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Babasha wrote on 2025-07-30, 06:13:
Hi! I already try all BIOS'es for my mobo inc. eSupport 2004 version. Its sad eSupport 2004 is rich-function one while been one […]
Show full quote
Chkcpu wrote on 2025-07-29, 19:35:
Hi Babasha, […]
Show full quote

Hi Babasha,

Strange that “New koeffs support” in the BIOS Patcher tool doesn’t work well when patching the VIB804DS “BIOS-L (80619)” version. I don’t know why that is.

However, you are in luck because your VIB804DS board uses the LGS Super IO and there is a Release 4.2 eSupport upgrade BIOS for LGS IO available for your board on TRW.
https://theretroweb.com/motherboards/s/pcpart … ds-35-8804#bios

This Rel. 4.2 BIOS supports all Socket 7 CPUs ever made, and has all HDD size limits and UDMA bugs fixed. So you don’t have to use a patched BIOS.

Please let us know if this eSupport BIOS works better on your board.
Cheers, Jan

Hi!
I already try all BIOS'es for my mobo inc. eSupport 2004 version.
Its sad eSupport 2004 is rich-function one while been one of the slowest in DOS and W98 too with AMD K6-2/450 and AMD K6-2/500. I Try to repatch it too but its gain intermediate performane boost compared to "my" patched version.

Hi Babasha,

Weird, the 2004 eSupport BIOS is the most advanced and should give you the best performance, not the lowest.

I got curious to where these performance differences come from, so in the 86Box emulator I experimented a bit with the original 0619 BIOS and the BIOS Patcher versions, both with and without the New Koeffs support patch.
However, I didn’t find any difference in chipset programming that could explain a difference in timing settings for L2 cache or RAM.

Can you explain how you measured these performance differences?
I’m also curious about the board setup:
- Did you use the Setup defauts in the BIOS, or Manually optimized settings?
- How much RAM was installed?
- Which memory sticks were used; FPM, EDO, or SDRAM?
- What was the CPU setting? Was it 6x75 for the K6-2/450 and 6x83 for the K6-2/500?

Thanks in advance for answering these question.

Regards, Jan

Hi!
With little delay my BIOS speed comparison table is ready
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Set4g … dit?usp=sharing

So on 500MHZ CPU - everything are OK and works as expected
If I try it with 450MHz:
1) eSupport 2004 is slowest BIOS (Q2DOS and Q2WIN shows it and there is strange video memory speed slowdown in SST 4.78)
2) 80619-L pathed with BP 4.23 without "NEW KOEFFS SUPPORT" is fastest BIOS but without proper FREQ detection on POST screen
3) 80619-L patched witt BP 4.23 and with "NEW KOEFFS SUPPORT" is intermediate performance, correct FREQ detection on POST screen

I try BIOSes from ZIDA 5SVA - they are with same symptoms((( You can get correct FREQ detection on POST screen but not so fast performance or vice versa(((

Need help? Begin with photo and model of your hardware 😉

Reply 265 of 282, by Chkcpu

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Babasha wrote on 2025-08-06, 11:51:
Hi! With little delay my BIOS speed comparison table is ready https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Set4g … dit?usp=sharing […]
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Chkcpu wrote on 2025-08-01, 10:02:
Hi Babasha, […]
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Babasha wrote on 2025-07-30, 06:13:

Hi!
I already try all BIOS'es for my mobo inc. eSupport 2004 version.
Its sad eSupport 2004 is rich-function one while been one of the slowest in DOS and W98 too with AMD K6-2/450 and AMD K6-2/500. I Try to repatch it too but its gain intermediate performane boost compared to "my" patched version.

Hi Babasha,

Weird, the 2004 eSupport BIOS is the most advanced and should give you the best performance, not the lowest.

I got curious to where these performance differences come from, so in the 86Box emulator I experimented a bit with the original 0619 BIOS and the BIOS Patcher versions, both with and without the New Koeffs support patch.
However, I didn’t find any difference in chipset programming that could explain a difference in timing settings for L2 cache or RAM.

Can you explain how you measured these performance differences?
I’m also curious about the board setup:
- Did you use the Setup defauts in the BIOS, or Manually optimized settings?
- How much RAM was installed?
- Which memory sticks were used; FPM, EDO, or SDRAM?
- What was the CPU setting? Was it 6x75 for the K6-2/450 and 6x83 for the K6-2/500?

Thanks in advance for answering these question.

Regards, Jan

Hi!
With little delay my BIOS speed comparison table is ready
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Set4g … dit?usp=sharing

So on 500MHZ CPU - everything are OK and works as expected
If I try it with 450MHz:
1) eSupport 2004 is slowest BIOS (Q2DOS and Q2WIN shows it and there is strange video memory speed slowdown in SST 4.78)
2) 80619-L pathed with BP 4.23 without "NEW KOEFFS SUPPORT" is fastest BIOS but without proper FREQ detection on POST screen
3) 80619-L patched witt BP 4.23 and with "NEW KOEFFS SUPPORT" is intermediate performance, correct FREQ detection on POST screen

I try BIOSes from ZIDA 5SVA - they are with same symptoms((( You can get correct FREQ detection on POST screen but not so fast performance or vice versa(((

Hi Babasha,

Thanks for the nice benchmark table. This makes your oberservations quite clear.
Here are some possible explanations for the differences at 500 and 450MHz.

-----
The performance figures with the original 80619-L BIOS are obviously lower than with the eSupport and patched BIOSes, both at 450 and 500MHz.
This is caused by the lack of Write-Allocation. All K6-2/400 and faster CPUs have the improved CXT core with x6 multiplier support. The original BIOS doesn’t support Write-Allocation for the CXT core, but the patched versions and the eSupport BIOS do.
A clear indication of missing Write-Allocation support is lower performance figures in SpeedSys, except for the MEM figure which is higher. This is a curious side effect of how Write-Allocation works.

-----
The patched ‘PTC’ BIOSes, without the New Koeffs support, have the best performance at both 450 and 500MHz, although the BIOS POST reports 400MHz.
This is expected, because the 400MHz display limit in these 1998 BIOSes is just cosmetic and doesn’t influence performance. The table for the CPU speed display in the BIOS simply doesn’t go any further than 400MHz.

-----

The attachment Monitor_1_20250813-162915-331.png is no longer available

As shown in the above picture, the BIOS sets the “DRAM Auto Configuration” to Disabled and “DRAM Timing Control” to Normal as defaults. These settings give you a fixed but conservative DRAM timing. Did you use these settings for your tests?
With these settings I can’t explain the strange low performance of the eSupport and fully patched BIOSes at 450MHz.
However, if you used “DRAM Auto Configuration” at 60ns or 70ns and “DRAM Timing Control” at Auto, the eSupport and fully patched BIOSes can have influenced the DRAM timing here.
My hypothesis that this only happens at 75MHz FSB, and not at 83MHz, lays in the fact that the VPX chipset has native 75MHz support and the BIOS supports this, causing relaxed the DRAM Timings when 75MHz FSB is detected. However, at 83MHz FSB, the BIOS is unaware of this setting and simply uses the faster DRAM timings for 66MHz FSB.
You can test this hypothesis by setting “DRAM Timing Control” on Fast or Turbo instead of Auto. If I’m correct, you should get the same performance with, or without, New Koeffs support at 450MHz, just like at 500MHz.

-----
To add another BIOS to the mix, here is a Unicore BIOS upgrade for your VPX board.
This 03/15/2000-580VPX-PRIME3-2A5LDV3AC-00 BIOS supports all socket 7 CPUs ever made and supports IDE drive up to 128GB.

The attachment 2A5LDV3A.zip is no longer available

Happy testing,
Jan

CPU Identification utility
The Unofficial K6-2+ / K6-III+ page

Reply 266 of 282, by Babasha

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Chkcpu wrote on 2025-08-13, 15:12:
Hi Babasha, […]
Show full quote
Babasha wrote on 2025-08-06, 11:51:
Hi! With little delay my BIOS speed comparison table is ready https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Set4g … dit?usp=sharing […]
Show full quote
Chkcpu wrote on 2025-08-01, 10:02:
Hi Babasha, […]
Show full quote

Hi Babasha,

Weird, the 2004 eSupport BIOS is the most advanced and should give you the best performance, not the lowest.

I got curious to where these performance differences come from, so in the 86Box emulator I experimented a bit with the original 0619 BIOS and the BIOS Patcher versions, both with and without the New Koeffs support patch.
However, I didn’t find any difference in chipset programming that could explain a difference in timing settings for L2 cache or RAM.

Can you explain how you measured these performance differences?
I’m also curious about the board setup:
- Did you use the Setup defauts in the BIOS, or Manually optimized settings?
- How much RAM was installed?
- Which memory sticks were used; FPM, EDO, or SDRAM?
- What was the CPU setting? Was it 6x75 for the K6-2/450 and 6x83 for the K6-2/500?

Thanks in advance for answering these question.

Regards, Jan

Hi!
With little delay my BIOS speed comparison table is ready
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1Set4g … dit?usp=sharing

So on 500MHZ CPU - everything are OK and works as expected
If I try it with 450MHz:
1) eSupport 2004 is slowest BIOS (Q2DOS and Q2WIN shows it and there is strange video memory speed slowdown in SST 4.78)
2) 80619-L pathed with BP 4.23 without "NEW KOEFFS SUPPORT" is fastest BIOS but without proper FREQ detection on POST screen
3) 80619-L patched witt BP 4.23 and with "NEW KOEFFS SUPPORT" is intermediate performance, correct FREQ detection on POST screen

I try BIOSes from ZIDA 5SVA - they are with same symptoms((( You can get correct FREQ detection on POST screen but not so fast performance or vice versa(((

Hi Babasha,

Thanks for the nice benchmark table. This makes your oberservations quite clear.
Here are some possible explanations for the differences at 500 and 450MHz.

-----
The performance figures with the original 80619-L BIOS are obviously lower than with the eSupport and patched BIOSes, both at 450 and 500MHz.
This is caused by the lack of Write-Allocation. All K6-2/400 and faster CPUs have the improved CXT core with x6 multiplier support. The original BIOS doesn’t support Write-Allocation for the CXT core, but the patched versions and the eSupport BIOS do.
A clear indication of missing Write-Allocation support is lower performance figures in SpeedSys, except for the MEM figure which is higher. This is a curious side effect of how Write-Allocation works.

-----
The patched ‘PTC’ BIOSes, without the New Koeffs support, have the best performance at both 450 and 500MHz, although the BIOS POST reports 400MHz.
This is expected, because the 400MHz display limit in these 1998 BIOSes is just cosmetic and doesn’t influence performance. The table for the CPU speed display in the BIOS simply doesn’t go any further than 400MHz.

-----

The attachment Monitor_1_20250813-162915-331.png is no longer available

As shown in the above picture, the BIOS sets the “DRAM Auto Configuration” to Disabled and “DRAM Timing Control” to Normal as defaults. These settings give you a fixed but conservative DRAM timing. Did you use these settings for your tests?
With these settings I can’t explain the strange low performance of the eSupport and fully patched BIOSes at 450MHz.
However, if you used “DRAM Auto Configuration” at 60ns or 70ns and “DRAM Timing Control” at Auto, the eSupport and fully patched BIOSes can have influenced the DRAM timing here.
My hypothesis that this only happens at 75MHz FSB, and not at 83MHz, lays in the fact that the VPX chipset has native 75MHz support and the BIOS supports this, causing relaxed the DRAM Timings when 75MHz FSB is detected. However, at 83MHz FSB, the BIOS is unaware of this setting and simply uses the faster DRAM timings for 66MHz FSB.
You can test this hypothesis by setting “DRAM Timing Control” on Fast or Turbo instead of Auto. If I’m correct, you should get the same performance with, or without, New Koeffs support at 450MHz, just like at 500MHz.

-----
To add another BIOS to the mix, here is a Unicore BIOS upgrade for your VPX board.
This 03/15/2000-580VPX-PRIME3-2A5LDV3AC-00 BIOS supports all socket 7 CPUs ever made and supports IDE drive up to 128GB.

The attachment 2A5LDV3A.zip is no longer available

Happy testing,
Jan

Hi, Chkcpu!

Tnx for your info and ideas.
In my previous post i dont attach BIOS setting and i attach them now.
They was same for 75 and 83 measurements while benchmarks.

Need help? Begin with photo and model of your hardware 😉

Reply 267 of 282, by Chkcpu

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Babasha, thanks for the complete BIOS Setup on the VIB804DS!

Is see that the “DRAM Timing Control” is indeed on Auto.
It would be interesting to know if the performance differences at 450MHz (75MHz FSB) disappear when setting this BIOS option on Fast or Turbo.
I hope it does, because that would prove my hypothesis. 😉

Cheers, Jan

CPU Identification utility
The Unofficial K6-2+ / K6-III+ page

Reply 268 of 282, by Repo Man11

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Hey Jan, I thought I'd give you this update on the Chaintech board. The only issue I had was that there was a consistent IRQ conflict that caused issues with the Promise Ultra 100 no matter what slot I put the card in. I finally gave up and installed a Promise S150 TX2 Plus with a SSD, and that has worked flawlessly. I used a PCI FX5500 and an AD1815 (it was nearby) for the sound card. There is a vendor on Ebay that has 64 meg EDO SIMMs for a pretty good price, and since they are late model you can set the memory to the fastest settings with no issues. I came to the conclusion that the way it powers down is by design, I guess to be consistent with both an AT and an ATX power supply. When the "It's now safe to turn off your computer" screen appears, you press the soft power switch and it shuts off. I had actually been shutting it off with the power supply rocker switch, then it occurred to me to try the soft power switch (I had been assuming that it would only work to shut it off if I held it down) and a quick press of the button and it shuts off.

After watching many YouTube videos about older computer hardware, YouTube began recommending videos about trains - are they trying to tell me something?

Reply 269 of 282, by Chkcpu

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Hey Repo Man11,

Thanks for the detailed follow-up. I’m glad you found a working solution with the S150 TX2.
Nice benchmark figures, and the transfer rates with the SSD are still 50% higher than you could ever reach on the on-board IDE channels!

Most of my Socket 7 systems are Baby AT boards, so I’m used to switching the system off manually after Windows has shutdown. So that with an ATX PSU you can just switch this board off with the soft power switch is a novelty for me as well.
A nice find!

Thanks again for testing the modded BIOS, I will now put this fixed Chaintech 5HTM0_J1 BIOS on my k6plus page at the next update.

Greetings, Jan

CPU Identification utility
The Unofficial K6-2+ / K6-III+ page

Reply 270 of 282, by jakethompson1

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Soft power was pretty essential to Intel's "Green PC" and parity-with-the-Macintosh-II goals when designing ATX, so imagine there has to be some way to get it working.

Some boards that take both ATX or AT power like this might have jumpers to change depending on the power supply type.

I believe the actual powering-off is done via APM, so if it's disabled or otherwise not being used by the OS to power down, that could be the issue.

Reply 271 of 282, by Repo Man11

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jakethompson1 wrote on 2025-08-17, 22:04:

Soft power was pretty essential to Intel's "Green PC" and parity-with-the-Macintosh-II goals when designing ATX, so imagine there has to be some way to get it working.

Some boards that take both ATX or AT power like this might have jumpers to change depending on the power supply type.

I believe the actual powering-off is done via APM, so if it's disabled or otherwise not being used by the OS to power down, that could be the issue.

There are no jumpers on the board and no settings in the CMOS on this board that affect this behavior. I've reinstalled Windows 98SE several times, no change. I've never had another motherboard that had this issue (including plenty of AT motherboards with an ATX power connector), and I've chalked it up to it being an extremely early ATX motherboard.

Perhaps it has to do with the fact that it has both AT and ATX power connections; while I've seen many AT motherboards that also had an ATX power connector, this is the only ATX motherboard I've ever had that had both styles.

Last edited by Repo Man11 on 2025-08-18, 00:45. Edited 1 time in total.

After watching many YouTube videos about older computer hardware, YouTube began recommending videos about trains - are they trying to tell me something?

Reply 272 of 282, by myne

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There were plenty of 9x patches that mentioned shutdown behaviour fixes.

Is it fully up to date?

I built:
Convert old ASUS ASC boardviews to KICAD PCB!
Re: A comprehensive guide to install and play MechWarrior 2 on new versions on Windows.
Dos+Windows 3.11+tcp+vbe_svga auto-install iso template
Script to backup Win9x\ME drivers from a working install
Re: The thing no one asked for: KICAD 440bx reference schematic

Reply 273 of 282, by Repo Man11

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myne wrote on 2025-08-18, 00:29:

There were plenty of 9x patches that mentioned shutdown behaviour fixes.

Is it fully up to date?

Very early on I tried a Win98 fast shutdown patch that changed nothing. The only thing I haven't tried is installing Win95 (which this board was designed for) and I have no intention of doing so because I have no interest in Win95. Just for the heck of it, I'll pop in another hard drive and install Win2000 to see what happens.

After watching many YouTube videos about older computer hardware, YouTube began recommending videos about trains - are they trying to tell me something?

Reply 274 of 282, by myne

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I'd just head to Windowsupdaterestored.com and scroll through the list looking for potential fixes.

And/or keep updating till there's nothing left

I built:
Convert old ASUS ASC boardviews to KICAD PCB!
Re: A comprehensive guide to install and play MechWarrior 2 on new versions on Windows.
Dos+Windows 3.11+tcp+vbe_svga auto-install iso template
Script to backup Win9x\ME drivers from a working install
Re: The thing no one asked for: KICAD 440bx reference schematic

Reply 275 of 282, by Repo Man11

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myne wrote on 2025-08-18, 01:56:

I'd just head to Windowsupdaterestored.com and scroll through the list looking for potential fixes.

And/or keep updating till there's nothing left

I also once tried the 2004 update CD which has all of the updates up to the year 2004, and that made no difference.

Installing Windows 2000 was smooth sailing, not one issue. But when I shut it down, once again...

Also, APM was not enabled by default, so I tried enabling it manually with the APM tab under Power Options. When I shut it down then, it goes to a blinking cursor in the upper left corner rather than the "It's now safe to shut down your computer" screen, and you still have to press the power button to shut it off.

After watching many YouTube videos about older computer hardware, YouTube began recommending videos about trains - are they trying to tell me something?

Reply 276 of 282, by megatog615

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Chkcpu... please help me with this stubborn BIOS ROM file!
https://theretroweb.com/motherboard/bios/t936 … 07053564709.zip

It's for a Teknor PCI-936 industrial SBC. I am having trouble getting the rom.by biospatcher to work with this. biospatcher seems to work correctly up until the end when it tries to re-pack everything, when it complains of not enough space. I can't cut any of the option roms out of the bin because they are essential for the system to work correctly. cbrom shows a system bios as normal and a second rom labelled as 'other', the name and size of which are completely garbled. I have tried every single version of cbrom i could find(over 21 versions) and they all either have this garbled issue or (with the 6xx versions) they dont show the second rom at all.

All I want to fix is HDD size so it's not stuck at 8GB max. Of course, I would very much be happy if I could get all of biospatcher's fixes working. I know biospatcher is slightly out of scope but I'm not sure if I could reliably hex edit this rom by myself.

Reply 277 of 282, by myne

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I still say try and find a 512kb bios chip and flash that. You'll probably need an adapter socket if you want to hot flash it.
Just make sure the chipset can support it first.

I built:
Convert old ASUS ASC boardviews to KICAD PCB!
Re: A comprehensive guide to install and play MechWarrior 2 on new versions on Windows.
Dos+Windows 3.11+tcp+vbe_svga auto-install iso template
Script to backup Win9x\ME drivers from a working install
Re: The thing no one asked for: KICAD 440bx reference schematic

Reply 278 of 282, by megatog615

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myne wrote on Yesterday, 01:26:

I still say try and find a 512kb bios chip and flash that. You'll probably need an adapter socket if you want to hot flash it.
Just make sure the chipset can support it first.

CBROM always shows the rom size incorrectly for the second rom. I'm not convinced anymore that there's not enough space, just that CBROM is incorrect.

Reply 279 of 282, by myne

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second rom?

I built:
Convert old ASUS ASC boardviews to KICAD PCB!
Re: A comprehensive guide to install and play MechWarrior 2 on new versions on Windows.
Dos+Windows 3.11+tcp+vbe_svga auto-install iso template
Script to backup Win9x\ME drivers from a working install
Re: The thing no one asked for: KICAD 440bx reference schematic