Reply 30220 of 56707, by Thermalwrong
A few weeks ago I bought some corroded motherboards from someone local that I've bought from before. There was a 386 board, a 486 board and a 286 board. The idea was to get the 486 board up and running, but that one has a keyboard controller problem and I've put it away for now.
In the lot was a 386 DX 40 motherboard with no cache, I can't identify it but I can kind of work out what's what on there. It for some reason uses a DS1287, which wasn't present at all and the socket for it was damaged. It didn't boot and just went through a couple of post codes very slowly, eventually just doing nothing.
I reinstalled a socket for the DS1287 and ordered some DS1287s from a chinese seller - once they arrived, I plugged it all in and now the board boots! Hooray!
I had to resolder some traces for the keyboard and it doesn't seem to work with one of my PS/2 keyboards, but it works with the Cherry keyboard so that's okay.
Except it can't keep BIOS settings, it won't use an external battery when I plug it into what I think is the battery header. These DS1287 modules have date codes of 1990 and 1992, apparently down to 0.2 and 0.6 volts respectively.
Thankfully I have a dremel and there are lots of YouTube videos showing how to cut into the DS1287 to put on a coin cell holder:
My test setup with the upgraded DS1287 fitted:
Now the keyboard, disk controller, mouse, sound, video all work, excellent 😁
Does anyone know what board this is? I'm wondering what the SLC1 socket could be for and what some of the jumper settings are