Morley: I'm doing a sector scan with VirusZ on all of my floppies and the hard drive. Nothing yet, but the scan is still in progress. Granted, it is a fresh install seeming as I replaced the GVP card (SCSI) with a DataFlyer (IDE). Then again, any infection would have to come from those diskettes or files from Aminet seeming as those are my only sources of software.
On to the more probable cause, hardware:
I've been running the system for about 12 hours without an incident. This is with a base A2000, plus DataFlyer IDE, plus DataFlyer RAM. The machine hasn't been given a heavy workout, but the serial port, RAM (via the RAM disk), and hard drive have been put to good use. I downloaded some more generic RAM testing software and will try to leave that running for a few hours this afternoon. If everything checks out, I'll plug the GVP back in and copy my existing setup over to a fresh SCSI hard drive (so that I can pull the IDE controller) and see what happens. If that seems to work, I'll conteplate swapping the fresh SCSI hard drive with my old SCSI hard drive to see if the jumpers on the GVP were the problem. Or maybe I'll avoid pushing my luck if everything works. ;-)
On hard drives:
I have plenty of SCSI units, ranging from 40 MB to 2 GB. Before the Amiga, I was working with 68k Macs. :nervous: All of those old Macs had a SCSI controller or two. IDE drives are actually an oddity for me.
On memory:
What is the limit, and how would the problem manifest itself (eg. irratic errors, undetected memory)?
The with the 6 MB SupraRAM and the 16 MB GVP board and the 1 MB on board, the Workbench was consistently reporting 23 MB RAM. I don't know if I ever used a quarter of that, but it was there for the taking. There appears to be some sort of conflict between the SupraRAM board and the DataFlyer RAM card.
Seeming as this problem usually manifests itself after the machine has been running for a while, I'm assuming that there is some sort of thermal problem. Perhaps it is a bad connection? Perhaps the circulation is extremely poor and something is over heating (with the GVP board in, the machine is pretty much broken into two compartments, with most of the heat generating stuff (the majority of the RAM, the hard drive, the processor) being tightly packed next to the power supply.
Actually, the speed of this thing isn't too bad with the GVP board removed. Much slower, to be sure, but I've seen worse.