VOGONS


First post, by badmojo

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I need help, yet again.

I have a Chaintech 486SPM which has onboard IO, but I don't have the COM / Parallel port cables that would have come with it. I've tried about 10+ different ones I have lying around from other motherboards / IO cards, but none of them work, i.e. my serial mouse is not detected.

Why wouldn't they all be a standard pinout?? What a bunch of cowboys they were back then. Anyway, does anyone know how me and my trusty multimeter can derive the pinout used by this particular motherboard? I can use an add-in card, but it seems a shame to waste a slot when I could be using the onboard ones.

Thanks for any help.

Life? Don't talk to me about life.

Reply 1 of 4, by 133MHz

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With a multimeter you can use its continuity setting to find the ground pin, by putting one lead to the metal chassis and running the other one through all the pins until you find the one that beeps (with the computer off). Knowing which one is the ground pin should lead you to the correct pinout.

Just as an academic exercise, TX could be found using a bi-color LED in series with a ~2k7 resistor as a probe: one side of the contraption to ground and the other to the pin under test. Using a terminal program set to a very low baud rate (say, 75 baud) by typing some characters in the terminal window you should see the LED change color when you probe the TX pin. Following that, RX could be found by bridging TX through a resistor to the rest of the pins until you get character loopback in the terminal window. Flow control pins could be identified using the same 'LED probe' and software capable of letting you toggle the lines individually.

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Reply 2 of 4, by Harekiet

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Using realterm you could nicely toggle certain pins on or off.

Reply 3 of 4, by badmojo

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133MHz wrote:

With a multimeter you can use its continuity setting to find the ground pin, by putting one lead to the metal chassis and running the other one through all the pins until you find the one that beeps (with the computer off). Knowing which one is the ground pin should lead you to the correct pinout.

Thanks I'll start with this and see how I go!

Life? Don't talk to me about life.

Reply 4 of 4, by badmojo

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Harekiet wrote:

Using realterm you could nicely toggle certain pins on or off.

Nice idea but this is a 486, so it's running Windows 3.1 😀

Life? Don't talk to me about life.