VOGONS


Reply 40 of 55, by Ozzuneoj

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Rubix wrote on 2026-02-02, 20:45:
Ozzuneoj wrote on 2026-02-02, 20:22:

I'm not saying that I recommend doing this, but I have actually seen the "freezer trick" work with dying hard drives. There are also half a dozens reasons why you shouldn't do this though, so... yeah. 😅

Yes, I've heard of it. But I thought it was only for drives that suffer from stiction. Let's first see what ddrescue manages to save. In my experience, it's often able to get quite a bit of data off of bad hard drives. Although this one is really bad, and especially executable files/drivers/etc. can't have errors in them.

Ddrescueview shows a nice visual of how bad the situation is 😅

Oof! Wow, that looks bad. But hey, the drivers for the sound card came on two floppy disks and we really only need probably a handful of files from one or the other. If 1MB is readable and it happens to contain what we're looking for then that would be okay for now. 😅

Regarding the freezer trick, I will make no on-record statement as to whether I was involved in the decision or not, nor will I take the credit for recovering that customer's files ~20 years ago (🤩), but at least in that situation it wasn't used to revive a drive suffering from stiction. It was a click of death of some sort as I recall.

(Again, this is not an endorsement... but if you use ddrescue and it doesn't find enough to be useful, and swapping the PCBs doesn't help, then... well...)

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.

Reply 42 of 55, by Ozzuneoj

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cyclone3d wrote on 2026-02-02, 22:14:

I've taken the covers off of hdds before to get them spinning so I could recover files.

Another thought is to reseat the connections on the circuitboards.

Great idea... If this thing was exposed to moisture and there was corrosion inside the computer, it is possible that contacts between the drive and its PCB could have been affected. I have never needed to check this myself, but I would definitely do it in this situation.

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.

Reply 43 of 55, by cyclone3d

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Sooooo, I think I am getting closer to figuring out this card and WaveFront sporting cards in general.

I'm having AI do analysis of WFLite, and from what it looks like so far, this should work for, I think, any of the WaveFront cards.

The missing piece, from what I have gathered, is that the utility that configures the card is what loads the .MOT file (the OS for the WaveFront). Since we don't have that part for this card, it is not going to work until one is made.

After the analysis of WFLite is complete, I will run the configuration program through it to see how to load the .MOT file.

So, in the end, for the JazzWave card, I am thinking we will have:
1. Jazz16 initializer
2. .MOT loader
3. WFLite

Also, the WaveFront chip apparently has a built-in MPU-401 emulator, so it makes sense why the MPU jumper is supposed to eb set to Disabled for the WaveFront to work. I guess theoretically it may be possible to have the Jazz16 MPU enabled at the same time IF the Wavefront MPU was using a different address. I doubt it is possible to set it up that way, but who knows.

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Reply 44 of 55, by Marmes

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There is no .MOT .I think this is for cards with Motorola processor. If you go to ics2115 datasheet, you see that you need to set chip in mpu401 mode then you can use it. It uses a palce20v8 to do it. We need to know the address mvlite.exe uses to set this. This is why wflite does not work.

Reply 45 of 55, by cyclone3d

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Marmes wrote on 2026-02-03, 08:24:

There is no .MOT .I think this is for cards with Motorola processor. If you go to ics2115 datasheet, you see that you need to set chip in mpu401 mode then you can use it. It uses a palce20v8 to do it. We need to know the address mvlite.exe uses to set this. This is why wflite does not work.

That is what I originally thought as well and it makes sense. I'm not 100% sure after looking at different driver packages though.

The addresses thing has been extracted and one of my next steps is to make a utility that polls those addresses to see if anything shows up and to try some other addresses as well.

Polling just a single address at a time does not return anything as has been tested for hours long tests to check all possible addresses.

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Reply 46 of 55, by Marmes

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I tried to read the palce20v8, it's protected. I know there are solutions for GAL and PAL to extract the code, but for PALCE I don't think they work. I don't want to risk to damage the chip.
I will wait. If the data extraction of the disks don't come to anything, we need to get a aztech or anstar cards to extract the code if they have gals instead of palce chips.

Reply 47 of 55, by cyclone3d

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I found a Korean bulletin board that has the driver for this card. Problem is, access to the download is only available to members and I am having trouble figuring out how to create an account or request an account:
https://lucyweb.net/bbs/board.php?bo_table=pd … wr_id=67&page=4
Name of the file is pawdrv.rar

Found the register page: https://lucyweb.net/bbs/register.php
HTTP_403
New membership registration is currently disabled.

Bah!

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Reply 48 of 55, by keropi

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cyclone3d wrote on Yesterday, 07:41:
I found a Korean bulletin board that has the driver for this card. Problem is, access to the download is only available to membe […]
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I found a Korean bulletin board that has the driver for this card. Problem is, access to the download is only available to members and I am having trouble figuring out how to create an account or request an account:
https://lucyweb.net/bbs/board.php?bo_table=pd … wr_id=67&page=4
Name of the file is pawdrv.rar

Found the register page: https://lucyweb.net/bbs/register.php
HTTP_403
New membership registration is currently disabled.

Bah!

I have asked for help from a Korean buyer of pcmidi.eu stuff - maybe we can get the file through him, when I have some news I will report back 😀

edit:
got a reply back, the site is not accepting registrations and there is no way to get the file even if you are located in Korea
probably this BBS site is just dead at this point
he will ask on Korean retro-forums in case someone has this or the original drivers archived...

🎵 🎧 MK1869, PCMIDI MPU , OrpheusII , Action Rewind , Megacard and 🎶GoldLib soundcard website

Reply 49 of 55, by Ozzuneoj

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Oof... Wow this thread is a rollercoaster. 🤣

But hey, at least we have yet another filename and a possible file size to look for. 2.4MB seems pretty big for a sound card driver from 1995, so I'm guessing it includes extra programs as well. Since the card uses a wavetable ROM and does not have RAM, then I don't think it would have sound banks or anything of that sort.

It would be nice to dig up some marketing materials related to this thing while we're at it. It is odd how little mention of it there is online.

If I had to guess, this was MediaVision's last attempt to use the Jazz16 before throwing in the towel (due to the legal\financial\leadership issues they faced) and going with third party solutions from ESS. It is possible that everyone got straight to work on Aureal Vortex once this was finished and they didn't spend a cent trying to promote it.

EDIT: Browsing their site in 1996 shows absolutely zero mention of this card at all. I am honestly surprised that they even listed the driver FTP links on the download page.
There is no press release for it...
https://web.archive.org/web/19970603222336/ht … e/announce3.htm

And nothing on the product page from 1996:
https://web.archive.org/web/19961110152047/ht … rt/ts_audio.htm
Or from 1997:
https://web.archive.org/web/19971007073328/ht … rt/ts_audio.htm

There is also this list of all their products by model number from 1996 and it isn't on there either:
https://web.archive.org/web/19961110142952/ht … rt/allparts.htm

There is nothing listed on the on this list of files on the FTP server from 1996:
https://web.archive.org/web/19961110143004/ht … rt/filelist.htm
But the driver file names are on the FTP file list from 1997:
https://web.archive.org/web/19970603203047/ht … rt/filelist.htm

... Maybe this thing had production issues due to all of the company's troubles and only a couple batches were made and shipped out late to OEMs without any fanfare? Perhaps if it was an OEM card the drivers could be available from whatever company sold systems with these installed. I wonder if there is any significance to the "Clr" at the end of the product name on the FTP list.

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.

Reply 50 of 55, by Ozzuneoj

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I just found a listing for a different version of this card with spaces for SCSI components , but with only the IDE ones actually populated.

https://shopozz.ru/de/items/226756100829-retr … audio-wavetable

FCCID: JZZWTSCSI
Model number: 650-0154-___

Name printed on card: Media Vision Pro Audio WTBL SCSI/IDE (TM 1995)

The attachment 1.jpg is no longer available
The attachment 2.jpg is no longer available
The attachment 3.jpg is no longer available
The attachment 4.jpg is no longer available
The attachment 6.jpg is no longer available

This seems to be the other card listed on various hardware sites (probably originating from TH99), such as this one:
http://www.yjfy.com/hardware/video/MEDIAvision.htm

PRO AUDIO WAVETABLE IDE (650-0154-52)

Last edited by Ozzuneoj on 2026-02-09, 18:32. Edited 2 times in total.

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.

Reply 51 of 55, by cyclone3d

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Cool. On a driver related note, it looks like IBM released driver source code for the Wavefront chip for OS/2. Think I found the correct development pack that should include it but will have to download it tonight to verify.

The driver readme states that the source code is available.

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Reply 52 of 55, by Ozzuneoj

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cyclone3d wrote on Yesterday, 18:06:

Cool. On a driver related note, it looks like IBM released driver source code for the Wavefront chip for OS/2. Think I found the correct development pack that should include it but will have to download it tonight to verify.

The driver readme states that the source code is available.

Interesting. Hopefully it is fairly straight forward to get that working.

I saw on this german message board that someone in 2020 claimed to have the driver and said they had uploaded it...
https://dosreloaded.de/forum/thread/3003-einr … -1995/?pageNo=3

Well... turns out they later edited the post to say they just had a Pro Audio 3D... bleh.

Eventually that thread goes on to find some of the same stuff we found here, and even links to another old VOGONS post about the card.

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.

Reply 53 of 55, by JidaiGeki

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Also interesting is this list linked from the MV Wikipedia page listing the MV products, presumably including some planned ones - https://web.archive.org/web/20060722003050/ht … mediavision.htm
The PAW300 is especially interesting, apparently promising a 2MB wavetable.
The 2.4MB Korean driver pack could be the 2x mv6200 floppies in one.

Reply 54 of 55, by Ozzuneoj

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JidaiGeki wrote on Today, 00:47:

Also interesting is this list linked from the MV Wikipedia page listing the MV products, presumably including some planned ones - https://web.archive.org/web/20060722003050/ht … mediavision.htm
The PAW300 is especially interesting, apparently promising a 2MB wavetable.
The 2.4MB Korean driver pack could be the 2x mv6200 floppies in one.

Oh! This is very interesting. I have seen the card mentioned somewhere as a PAW200, or something similar to that with 200 in the name, so that is definitely the card we're looking at in this thread.

Also, this list explains the mv6200 name on the driver package... The Pro Audio Wavetable was apparently included in the MV6200 or MV6200SE multimedia kits. That is another possible avenue to check then.

The PAW300 would most likely be the ICS Wavefront with the ICS2122M-001 2MB ROM mentioned in the datasheet.

It makes sense that both options would have existed for this card since the PCB has a location for a large TSOP44 chip already. The 4MB model apparently uses two uncompressed 2MB ROM chips, so would not be possible on this card without a different design.

And I agree that the 2.4MB driver pack is probably the contents of both of the MV6200 floppies.

EDIT: It seems I keep rediscovering the same information that I already learned 3 years ago...
Re: Bought these (retro) hardware today

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.

Reply 55 of 55, by Ozzuneoj

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Okay, I missed this before... there is a press release on their site from April 25th 1995 announcing the release of the 6x CD-ROM MV6200 Multimedia Kit, which includes the "Pro Audio Wavetable 32" sound card. The article says it includes 1MB of samples, which seems to be incorrect since the ICS wavefront ROMs are either 512KB or 2MB. It also mentions something about a line of 16bit sound cards with wavetable.

https://web.archive.org/web/19971007074022fw_ … nce/0424_pr.htm

Press Release: Media Vision announces a 6x multimedia kit for the computer enthusiast […]
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Press Release: Media Vision announces a 6x multimedia kit for the computer enthusiast

Taking the Multimedia Experience to a New Level by Offering the Best Performance and Superior Sound Available Today in Multimedia Hardware

ATLANTA, GA -- APRIL 24, 1995 -- (COMDEX Booth #M4618) -- Media Vision's new MV-6200 goes beyond the standard with the first 6X (hex-speed) multimedia kit. This kit gives the most demanding multimedia consumers a vivid, realistic computing experience. With the high-speed drive and advanced wavetable audio technology, the visual and audio computer experience approaches that of home theater systems.

The MV-6200's super-fast internal CD-ROM drive, is believed to be the first 6X drive offered in an upgrade kit. Hex-speed drives are 50 percent faster than quad-speed drives, making video and graphics appear more life-like. Also included is the new Pro Audio Wavetable 32 sound card with one full megabyte of wavetable samples providing clear, powerful stereo sound to multimedia applications. The sound card is Windows 95 Plug and Play ready. The powerful 15 watt amplified, magnetically shielded stereo speakers round out the superior sound of this combination of multimedia technology.

"Just like the discriminating buyer who replaces a factory-installed car radio with a superior stereo system, the person who purchased a multimedia computer will want the MV-6200 upgrade for its vastly superior multimedia experience," said Bob Brownell, Media Vision president and CEO. "And for the millions of home computer owners who don't have multimedia yet, this kit gives them the best quality that exists for an affordable price."

Includes Everything Needed for Top Quality Performance

The 6X internal CD-ROM drive has a transfer rate of 900 KB per second, an access time of 150ms and comes with a standard IDE interface with a 256K buffer size. It includes a headphone jack and volume control and is Multisession Photo CD and CD-i Movie Ready.

The Media Vision Pro Audio Wavetable 32 sound card has high-end 32 voice wavetable synthesis with one megabyte of wavetable samples. Wavetable provides the most advanced sound by using a library of real recorded instruments instead of basic FM simulation. It is Windows 95 Plug and Play ready and Sound Blaster compatible. The kit also includes premium 15 watt, powered speakers that provide higher quality sound than speakers typically included in mainstream multimedia kits.

The kit comes with three popular software applications, a CompuServe( Starter CD, plus a bonus CD with 50 exciting shareware games. The included titles are Compton's Interactive Encyclopedia for Windows '95 Edition, MidiSoft Sound Impression and MidiSoft Recording Session.

Easy Installation Kit and Software Enable Fast Start-Up

The system includes the Media Vision Easy Installation Kit, complete with everything a user needs to get started. An installation video tape simplifies the process by walking users through it step-by-step in easy to follow demonstrations. It is supplemented by an award-winning installation guide. All necessary cables are provided and color-coded for foolproof installation. A Windows-based install program automatically configures the user's PC. If any problems should occur the award-winning on-line technical support software answers basic installation questions and gives tips on advanced configuration solutions. A tool kit contains everything needed for physical installation, including a handy screwdriver.

Price and Availability

The Media Vision MV-6200 will be available in major retail outlets throughout the country in June, for a suggested retail price of $549.

Comdex Booth Features Other Exciting Multimedia and Interactive Products

In addition to the prototype of the ground-breaking MV-6200, in its booth at Comdex, Media Vision is showing an exciting line of multimedia products with something for everybody. Its products include the MV-2200 quad-speed multimedia kit, containing high-performance hardware at a low price; a line of 16-bit Wavetable sound cards that enhance music synthesis through 32 voice wavetable synthesis, surround sound, special effects and Windows 95 Plug and Play ready hardware; and portable multimedia solutions featuring the Reno portable CD-ROM player and a game player's PCMCIA sound card.

The company also is demonstrating its telephony technology, that allows two interactive game players (e.g. playing Doom) to compete and talk to each other over a single telephone line. It combines its 16-bit sound technology with a simultaneous voice and data fax/modem. Media Vision expects to announce a product later this summer.

Media Vision, headquartered in Fremont, California, is a leading provider of multimedia technology to the consumer computing marketplace. The company is a recognized leader in a full-range of multimedia technology including CD-ROM upgrade kits, audio add-in cards and a line of proprietary audio chip sets. The company sells its products through computer retail and mass merchandising channels, and to original equipment manufacturers. Media Vision maintains international sales offices in Munich, Paris, London and Sydney. In addition, it has representative offices in Hong Kong, Tokyo and Madrid.

Now for some blitting from the back buffer.