First post, by Bobbi
Hi folks,
Long time lurker, first time poster. I recently found a 486 in the garbage, and it sparked some enthusiasm to bring it back to life. The original mainboard had been damaged beyond my abilities to repair, so I procured a replacement motherboard on eBay, which seems to work fine. The board is an MV035 "Green Function VL-Bus System Board" with 486DX-33, 8MB (in two 72 pin SIMMs) and 128K of L2 cache. Chipset is Opti. The video card is a VLbus Cirrus Logic and there is an ISA multi-io card with a Goldstar chipset (IDE, FDC, 2S, P, game). System works fine and I can boot Slackware 3.3 from 3.5" floppy. Yay!
I don't have a PATA HDD, so I though to use a CF card. As it happened, I already had one of the popular/cheap two slot CF card adaptors "CF-IDE40 V.E0 (Double/DMA/3LED) and a few CF cards (adaptor and cards borrowed from my Apple II which has an IDE controller card ...) I had no luck whatsoever with this adaptor in the PC. I am plugging it directly into the IDE connector on the multi-io board. If the adaptor is populated with a 512MB CF card (smallest one I have) then the machine doesn't POST - video doesn't even initialize. If I remove the CF card and have just the empty adaptor connected to the IDE then I get an HDD Controller Failure and FDD Controller Failure from the BIOS.
I decided to try a different tack and bought a Startech IDE-SATA converter, which some folks seem to have had success with here. Hooking up a SATA drive (I tried a few, all pretty large by 486-era standards) I am able to 'Auto Identify' the drive in the BIOS, although it gets nonsense values. However on attempting a boot, I get FDC Controller Failure again, which seems odd. Why should hooking up an HDD cause the floppy drive controller to crap out? I have not confirmed 100% whether it is talking to the drive - I guess I may try and put a LILO boot block on it or something and see if it can at least load the MBR block. If I disconnect the SATA HDD and leave the converter connected to the IDE, the machine works again and I can boot from floppy.
Does anyone have any insight into why neither the CF or the SATA converter seem to work on this particular multi-io / 486? I find it very mysterious that we get the FDC failure with both the CF and the SATA connected.
At this point I just want to get a working mass storage device of some description. Any suggestions what I should buy, other than an ancient IDE drive? I don't want to keep buying devices if they're not going to work. Maybe I should find a different multi-io controller?