Amiga.org
Amiga computer related discussion => General chat about Amiga topics => Topic started by: A4000_Mad on November 23, 2010, 02:26:08 PM
-
Hi Guys,
The internal floppy drive of an A4000 stopped being able to read floppy disks this morning and I was a bit peeeeed of about it....
(http://i120.photobucket.com/albums/o164/Cyberstorm604e/J352.jpg)
But I was able to make an external floppy drive, plugged onto the rear of the A4000, behave exactly like the internal floppy drive by simply removing the cable and power lead from the internal drive and changing the jumper J352 on the motherboard from INT to EXT (as shown). You can even insert a bootable floppy disk into the external drive, switch on your A4000 and boot straight into the floppy.
If you know of or discover something which could be helpful to others, then feel free to post it here :)
:drink:
-
Brilliant find!
-
Weird its labeled so clear and logically! Usually, we're used to incorrect jumper settings printed in manuals or online and/or identified incorrectly on the board. (A2000 GVP accelerators come to mind) :lol:
-
Weird its labeled so clear and logically! Usually, we're used to incorrect jumper settings printed in manuals or online and/or identified incorrectly on the board. (A2000 GVP accelerators come to mind) :lol:
I can attest to this! GVP must have 3-4 sets of jumper settings in their docs that are wrong for stuff like A2000 Gforce 030 boards. They say don't experiment with jumpers,but following gvp's instructions half the time is experimenting.. lol
Mike
-
Brilliant find!
I coudn't agree with you more RMK305 :biglaugh:
By coincidence I had just put my first ever LCD monitor on an Amiga the same day as the internal floppy drive packed up....
(http://i120.photobucket.com/albums/o164/Cyberstorm604e/A4000withExternalFloppy.jpg)
With space being a bit tight between a cupboard and a desk occupied by an A1200 Desktop, it is handy to have extra room for my CD32 control pad and some floppies too. I will of course be replacing the internal drive at some point, but there is no rush as the set up is working great with the almost silent running GVP external floppy drive which was new out of the box :)
-
Actually, somebody posted an interesting discovery over on aw.net the other day:
http://www.pagetable.com/docs/amigados_tripos/tripos_manuals.pdf
I downloaded them and had a read. The origins of AmigaDOS laid bare.
-
Actually, somebody posted an interesting discovery over on aw.net the other day:
http://www.pagetable.com/docs/amigados_tripos/tripos_manuals.pdf
I downloaded them and had a read. The origins of AmigaDOS laid bare.
First it took ages for the page to load then I got a message telling me "Safari wants to use the font Candara Bold Italic"... :(
-
http://get.adobe.com/reader/otherversions/
-
First it took ages for the page to load then I got a message telling me "Safari wants to use the font Candara Bold Italic"... :(
Try saving the link, rather than opening it in the browser.
-
http://get.adobe.com/reader/otherversions/
Doesn't OSX directly handle viewing PDF documents? I seem to recall it had no problems viewing them when I was using 10.2 way back in ... whenever the hell it was.
-
Cheers guys, I've just copied the font across from the old G4 to the G5 it works now. :)
I can't seem to do that trick anymore with the right mouse button though since I got this G5 and updated Safari... :(
-
Doesn't OSX directly handle viewing PDF documents? I seem to recall it had no problems viewing them when I was using 10.2 way back in ... whenever the hell it was.
It does have some sort of document viewer built in, but I always go for the non-Apple solution.
-
Setting up a CDrom drive
Hi Guys,
I've just had to get a CDrom drive working on an A1200 Tower, so thought I'd put what I did here in case it is of use to anyone :)
I've always used IDEfix97 myself obtainable from here:-
http://aminet.net/search?query=idefix97
Here's a screenshot............
(http://i120.photobucket.com/albums/o164/Cyberstorm604e/CDrom1.jpg)
My own shortcut was to just copy over the required files from an A4000 which was already setup and using a CDrom.
The file called IDEfix goes into the C drawer of Workbench.
The file called CacheCDFS goes the L drawer of Workbench.
The driver CD1 goes into the Devs/DOSdrivers drawer of Workbench.
The tools called FindDevice and Register I just put into my Work partition.
As the A1200 Tower is using a 4-way-buffered-IDE-interface, I used the text editor EditPad to add these 3 lines to the top of my Startup-Sequence which is located in the S drawer of Workbench:-
If Exist C:IDEFix
C:IDEfix
EndIf
(NOTE: You do *not* need to add those lines unless using a 4-way-buffered-IDE-interface.
i.e. You wouldn't need to add them for a SCSI CDrom on an A2000 or a for a CDrom drive on the PCMCIA slot of an A1200 Desktop, for example)
After a reboot to get IDEfix running, I double clicked on FindDevice, ticked the little box "Show All Device Types, and then clicked on the devices listed in the left FindDevice window. This caused my devices to display in the right FindDevice window. As you can see from the screenshot above, my hard drive and CDrom drive both showed up as scsi.devices with the WDC hard drive being Unit 0 and the Matshita CDrom drive as Unit 1 (The hard drive is attached to the IDE leads first position and the CDrom drive is on the IDE leads second position).
This obtained information of scsi.device and Unit 1 is important for the driver CD1 which is in the DOSdrivers drawer of Workbench. The driver CD1 is now loaded into a text editor to have its details checked and altered if necessary.
See the screenshot below......................
(http://i120.photobucket.com/albums/o164/Cyberstorm604e/CDrom2.jpg)
As you can see, the top 3 lines of CD1 are now correct for the CDrom drive:-
FileSystem = L:CacheCDFS
Device = "scsi.device"
Unit = 1
All went smoothly for me and I hope it does for you too if you use this post :)
:pint:
-
I am probably the last person on the planet who didn't know this, so feel free to laugh, but last night I discovered that you can drag screens in workbench by holding down left amiga and clicking anywhere
-
I am probably the last person on the planet who didn't know this, so feel free to laugh, but last night I discovered that you can drag screens in workbench by holding down left amiga and clicking anywhere
No that makes you the second last person to know this :)
-
I discovered that you shouldn't try soldering on Amigas without first practicing on some diy electronic kits.
Also you should take photos of your progress in case a year passes between disassembling something and getting around to reassembling it.
Get crocodile clips for your multimeter... prevents slipping with the probes.
-
I am probably the last person on the planet who didn't know this, so feel free to laugh, but last night I discovered that you can drag screens in workbench by holding down left amiga and clicking anywhere
I had forgotten that so thanks for the reminder :)
Does anyone remember what will allow you to drag open windows past the edge of the screen?
-
8 think powerWindows is what your after.