« on: January 30, 2018, 03:45:38 AM »
I was running a Fast ATA IV using a 4GB disk on module and 32GB SATA SSD but because was getting disk checksum errors and red screens (suggesting ROM issue) I removed the FastATA.
The issue probably has something with how I had the FastATA extended (to fit over the Indivision) with a stack of DIP sockets. The sockets I used had really thin flimsy flat pins and I think it could have worked better had I used ones with round pins.
I see Amigakit has this but the comments rate it poorly say it won't fit in a desktop case 
https://amigakit.amiga.store/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=1295
Hey Nate, I went down this exact same road with my FastATA MKIV not fitting correctly using a stack of sockets (rows tapered going towards the front to get the keyboard to fit) that had round pins. At the time I didn't see the harm in just mashing them down into the standard ROM sockets on the mobo but, it did do a bit of damage to the sockets and made them flakey. The AmigaKit sockets, yes, are way too thin and are flakey too. You may never go back to your FastATA but I loved mine and found that I need to replace my mobo sockets with round machined hole sockets (which I haven't done yet). I think I'm just gonna send it Acill as a couple of ceramic caps need to be replaced too. Just let him get the parts...
In my process of troubleshooting I also tested the RAM with Advanced Amiga Analyser and found that my 64MB EDO SIMM consistently tested bad a the same address. I had a different much smaller SIMM and that worked fine, and now I've replaced both SIMMS with matching single-sided low-profile 64MB modules and the full 128mb all tests fine.
NICE!
I did not see any signs of leaking caps, but I do have a cap kit ready to go...Just not sure if I'm the guy to do the soldering.
My Indi AGA MKI was doing all kinds of weird stuff and would not init properly but would eventually start working after the machine warmed for about 45-60 minutes. Yup, cap replacement fixed it. You may want to get Acill to do the job for you - he knows what he's doing - he has a MAC board of mine right now.
I replaced it with my Elbox 4xEIDE so that I could have access all my drives. I realise it is much slower, but the Indivision is essential. I changed C:ATA3.Driver to C:4xEIDE.driver in startup-sequence.
Between the RAM and getting rid of the FastATA, the A1200 is now running great which makes me happy, however, after much tinkering, I just could not get 4xEIDE driver to work reliably with Blizkick, so now I've commented out BlizKick which was doing a number of things for me... and I've forgotten what many those things are
Anyway, one symptom was phantom drives with no volume label in sysinfo. If I clicked on them, the computer would crash with Smartcrash reporting an issue with 4xEIDE.
Another problem was that the computer would cold boot, but any subsequent resets it would crash after or right before loading workbench and keep doing that cycle.
Disabling either Blizkick or 4xEIDE.driver makes the computer stable.. In fact, I've been successfully using ScummVM many hours lately which is super CPU intensive. I'm just really enjoying the MT32 support which is new to me.
Anyway, is there a way to make 4xIDE work correctly with BlizKick?
If not, is there maybe a different driver I could try? Perhaps IdeFix is better? Will it work with my adaptor?
Is IdeFix Express going to be produced again?
Thanks,
nate
Someone else will have to chime in here.... :laugh1:
« Last Edit: January 30, 2018, 03:55:22 AM by gizmo350 »

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A500: 2MB Chip, 8MB Fast, IndiECS, MiniMegi, IDE4ZorroII on Z-500, KS1.3/KS3.1, WB3.1&BWB
A2000HD: 2MB Chip, 128MB Fast, P5:Blizz 2060@50MHz, PCD-50B/4GBCF, XSurf100, RapidRoad, IndiECS, Matze RTG, MiniMegi, CD-RW, SunRize AD516, WB3.9
A1200: 2MB Chip, 64MB Fast, 4GBCF, GVP Typhoon 030 @40MHz w/FPU, Subway USB, EasyNet Ethernet, Indi AGA MKI, FastATA MK-IV, Internal Slim CD/DVD-RW, WB3.5
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