Finally got my old 1996 Pentium 200 system back on line. I had to put a new Dallas clock chip which I already mentioned a few pages back, and replaced the graphics card so I could get it to post.
I used to have a Diamond Stealth 64 VRAM. I tried some new PCI cards using older chips that I got from Newegg. But none of them will post. And I think it's because of how old this motherboard is. Something about it being 3volt or "Universal PCI"? I'm not fully up on it but, I do remember having a problem with it back in 2001 when I tried to get a new cleaner sounding PCI sound card that could take my Sound Canvas SC-55 daughter-board. It wouldn't work and it didn't even power up. Back and fourth with Turtle Beach support was no help. I did eventually get it work in a Pentium 4 system I got a year later though.
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Anyway, after I got it to post, I plugged all the drives in and forgot that I had in the past disabled the SCSI drive. So when it booted up, I couldn't get Win 95 to startup without all sorts of drama. (I boot it to dos 7 first and then launch the desired windows version from the command line.) As it turns out, I had Windows95 installed on the drive E which used to be on the failing SCSI drive but I had since moved it to a new 18 GB IDE drive that was to be the new "E" drive. And since this is Windows 95a I had to partition that new drive into several 2 GB drives. I had drive letters from "C" to "U". Once I remembered to disable the SCSI drive it dropped three partitions and booted up. You see, the way I had tweaked Windows 95 was to have my desktop on drive G the start menu was on Drive "P", etc. it was a mess back then and still a mess. Most of my Windows 95 programs were spread out on drives "F", "H", "I", "J", etc. I had a whole partition "K" dedicated to holding Visual Studio SDKs. But with the old SCSI drive plugged in, it threw it all off. If there is one thing I wish the old dos/win could have done was let us assign the hard drive partition letters.
Since all the Win31 programs remained on C and D that was about all I could do. I could also boot into DOS 6.2 if I wished and run a different configuration of Win3.1. but with with dos 6.2 FAT16(without the X) I wouldn't be able to see any drive letter after "I". Like I said, it was a mess. A weird mess.
Anyway, I was happy to see I could actually play back my old music composition that I had done for the Sound Canvas. I used to do a lot of music in those days when I was working on my Engineering degree (mid to late 90's). I would submit my stuff to the old Sound Canvas Users Group, which sadly doesn't exist anymore. Good times though!
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