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first thing to do is remove that green leaking battery off the board. it looks like it is fuzzy and ever day left on it will cause more damage. the machine will operate fine without the battery.We need some more information as to what the machine is or is not doing to help you.After removing the battery take some close up pics of that area.
Nice! Looks like a decent system with some upgrades already. A2000's can be a lot of fun. +1 to get rid of that battery! :hammer:
If you want a battery on there, you should replace it with something like this:http://amigakit.leamancomputing.com/catalog/product_info.php?products_id=1093
Thats a nickel–metal hydride battery already so no need to remove or replace at this time. Looks fine to me. The original batteries were Ni Cad and leaked badly.
When I replaced my battery I soldered a CD audio cable with 1 end cut off and put the battery on a small board with connector pins on it, then mounted it behind the LED's, no ISA slot used so fits great and I can remove it easy for replacement, no removing the motherboard!Chris
Uh, do you see the 50-pin "header" right next to the hard drive? The one labeled CN6 with a "1" at the bottom; this is the SCSI controller connector. There should be a power connector for the hard drive as well that says, "power." A short 2 to 3 inch cable used to connect the CN6 to the SCSI connector on the hard drive and a short power connector with two female ends connected the one below the CN6 to the hard drives power.Does this seem plausible?
You're killing me, man. Since I happen to have an A2091 sitting right next to me on my shelf, I made the attached picture for you. Plug the 50-pin ribbon cable into the 50-pin header on the board, and the 3-pin power LED cable into the 3-pin power header on the board. As @danbeaver said the 50-pin cable should only go one way, you'll want to match pin 1 to pin 1 on the cable (usually red). The LED cable can go either way. If for some reason it doesn't work, try flipping it around.The power cable is the four-pin molex connector. It can only plug in one way and should be obvious.I hope this helps, my hope and prayer is that maybe someday everyone will start using the built-in forum tools to attach pictures, instead of linking to external sites. Sorry, pet peeve of mine. Hopefully there's no accelerator-specific software on that hard drive that will prevent it from booting with the accelerator removed. You'll probably want to format it and do a fresh OS install, anyway. Good luck!
Well, yes, pretty much; but I don't see the power supply to the hard drive.
NO! It is there to supply power TO the Hard Drive.
:laughing:Interesting Card from your PhotoBucket site; have only a few relatives?[ATTACH]3817[/ATTACH]
Three inches sounds right -- it is female-to-female; to the best of my knowledge, that is the only card with such an odd power (cable) arrangement.
Yes, that should work. You plug the 4-pin connector on the board directly into the 4-pin connector on the hard drive, the shorter the cable the better. As an alternative I believe you could power the hard drive directly from the A2000's PSU and plug NOTHING into the connector on the board, this is if you didn't have the special Female-to-Female cable.