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Offline scuzzb494Topic starter

A1200 Slow Boot
« on: October 25, 2015, 12:40:48 AM »
Hi

Stock A1200 basic machine and when firing up takes a good while to boot. Eventually does so and runs the OS from the disk without fault. Has Power Computing 4MB RAM card fitted.

Just slow to get going and wondering if that indicates anything.

Offline Oldsmobile_Mike

Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #1 on: October 25, 2015, 12:47:33 AM »
Quote from: scuzzb494;798069
Just slow to get going and wondering if that indicates anything.

Could you be more specific?  What part of the boot process is taking a long time?  Right now we'd just be guessing - could be anything from an IDE error to having a bunch of crap in your Startup-Sequence or WBStartup drawer.  ;)
Amiga 500: 2MB Chip|16MB Fast|30MHz 68030+68882|3.9|Indivision ECS|GVP A500HD+|Mechware card reader + 8GB CF|Cocolino|SCSI DVD-RAM
Amiga 2000: 2MB Chip|136MB Fast|50MHz 68060|3.9|Indivision ECS + GVP Spectrum|Mechware card reader + 8GB CF|AD516|X-Surf 100|RapidRoad|Cocolino|SCSI CD-RW
 Amiga videos and other misc. stuff at https://www.youtube.com/CompTechMike/videos
 

Offline scuzzb494Topic starter

Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #2 on: October 25, 2015, 09:36:42 AM »
Quote from: Oldsmobile_Mike;798070
Could you be more specific?  What part of the boot process is taking a long time?  Right now we'd just be guessing - could be anything from an IDE error to having a bunch of crap in your Startup-Sequence or WBStartup drawer.  ;)


Slow boot. Switch machine on. No disk in drive and takes way too long for the disk request to appear on the screen. If I boot with a standard OS3 Amiga Workbench disk you wait a very long time for the drive to kick into gear and fire up the OS.

There is no hard drive. There is only a Power Computing RAM board with 4MB RAM. From my experience the computer is taking way too long to kick in with the boot. Just sits there waiting for some reason.

Stock Amiga 1200. Other than that works like a dream. Once it gets to the boot process the drive clicks in and then without disk clicks regularly. You can put a floppy in the drive at that point and will be recognised straight away.

This has nothing to do with software from media. Its a hardware issue or maybe the card and I guess that is what I will do today. Remove and see. Plus check the motherboard over. I don't really like to mess too much when I have machines working. Playing Uridium and running like a dream.

Offline AmiDude

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Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #3 on: October 25, 2015, 09:45:28 AM »
Quote from: scuzzb494;798080
Slow boot. Switch machine on. No disk in drive and takes way too long for the disk request to appear on the screen. If I boot with a standard OS3 Amiga Workbench disk you wait a very long time for the drive to kick into gear and fire up the OS.

There is no hard drive. There is only a Power Computing RAM board with 4MB RAM. From my experience the computer is taking way too long to kick in with the boot. Just sits there waiting for some reason.

Stock Amiga 1200. Other than that works like a dream. Once it gets to the boot process the drive clicks in and then without disk clicks regularly. You can put a floppy in the drive at that point and will be recognised straight away.

This has nothing to do with software from media. Its a hardware issue or maybe the card and I guess that is what I will do today. Remove and see. Plus check the motherboard over. I don't really like to mess too much when I have machines working. Playing Uridium and running like a dream.


Put in a harddisk. It'll go much faster then.
 

Offline zipper

Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #4 on: October 25, 2015, 10:29:48 AM »
 

Offline paul1981

Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #5 on: October 25, 2015, 10:53:04 AM »
Sounds like failing capacitors. Best to get them replaced! Amigakit provide such a service.
 

Offline Blizz1220

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Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #6 on: October 25, 2015, 11:35:18 AM »
When you power up machine do you hear drive doing "click click" or
is it just silent ? I mean without floppy disk inside ?

Maybe it's hacked PC Floppy drive or Escom so it's missing this feature or
it developed fault over time ? Check connection between floppy and
motherboard.No matter how bad PSU is I think stock Amiga with low-profile
turbo card shouldn't be the cause.You'd get no picture then.

Any way to check your Kickstart version (if it's 3.1 or 3.0) ?

Not that caps aren't a concern.
 

Offline scuzzb494Topic starter

Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #7 on: October 25, 2015, 01:22:54 PM »
Quote from: paul1981;798090
Sounds like failing capacitors. Best to get them replaced! Amigakit provide such a service.


I guess that is what I fear. Trouble is I have so many computers I just don't have the resources. I am going round the 1200s at the moment and they are probably starting to show signs of this being an issue.

Thanks.

Offline scuzzb494Topic starter

Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #8 on: October 25, 2015, 01:28:36 PM »
Quote from: Blizz1220;798096
When you power up machine do you hear drive doing "click click" or
is it just silent ? I mean without floppy disk inside ?

Maybe it's hacked PC Floppy drive or Escom so it's missing this feature or
it developed fault over time ? Check connection between floppy and
motherboard.No matter how bad PSU is I think stock Amiga with low-profile
turbo card shouldn't be the cause.You'd get no picture then.

Any way to check your Kickstart version (if it's 3.1 or 3.0) ?

Not that caps aren't a concern.


The computer is an original Commodore 1200 and was working fine up to around August 2010 when she went into store. I label all the machines and log any issues. There is no activity on the computer other than the power light for a good time before the computer finally kicks into gear. Once it has registered the activity the computer works fine. I have had only one or two minor glitches with game loading, otherwise mouse and joy ports plus video and sound are all working fine. Once the boot screen appears the floppy works without fault. 3 ROM.

Offline paul1981

Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #9 on: October 25, 2015, 06:33:51 PM »
With all the machines you have, maybe it would be an idea to get them all re-capped with Tantalums. There's a thread at eab discussing this. Infact there's a few, but this is one of them:

http://eab.abime.net/showthread.php?t=50361

The idea being that once re-capped, you can basically store your collection and forget about it as there will be no smd electrolytic's to leak.
 

Offline QuikSanz

Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #10 on: October 25, 2015, 07:05:23 PM »
Re-seat all chips especially ROM's. Sitting too long.
 

Offline save2600

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Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #11 on: October 26, 2015, 02:11:35 AM »
Kickstart's the only two chips you'll be reseating in an A1200.   ;)  

Never heard of anyone terminating or needing to terminate an IDE port - until now!   :lol:

Wish someone would solve an issue I've had for years on one of my A2000's with a SCSI CD-ROM. Delay is damn near 30 seconds before the computer finally boots. SCSI is terminated properly as is the CD drive and I've tried every configuration under the sun contrary to common sense, logic or not. Using an A2091 card with 7.0 ROMS too. WTF? If I keep a CD in the drive, the computer boots much faster, but not as fast as it is "supposed" to for an Amiga. I've just lived with it for years and years now. Machine still boots faster than any of my modern Mac's, iPad's or iPhones. How stupid is that?!?   :laughing:
« Last Edit: October 26, 2015, 02:44:35 AM by save2600 »
 

Offline bloodline

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Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #12 on: October 26, 2015, 07:37:26 AM »
Quote from: scuzzb494;798069
Hi

Stock A1200 basic machine and when firing up takes a good while to boot. Eventually does so and runs the OS from the disk without fault. Has Power Computing 4MB RAM card fitted.

Just slow to get going and wondering if that indicates anything.
This is normal, the 3.0 Kickstart has a large reset delay to give any attached hard drive time to spin up. When the A1200 was designed back in 1992, hard drives took a long time to spin up.

As already stated in this thread, if you add a hard drive, the reset cycle will complete much quicker.

I remember bring freaked out by the huge reset delay when I first switched my A1200 on (23 years ago almost to the day!), after having just upgraded from an A500.

Offline Blizz1220

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Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #13 on: October 26, 2015, 08:33:11 AM »
Kick 3.1 introduced that long delay , Amiga 1200 with kick 3.0 has
very short delay (if any) which often results in having to soft reboot
the system for it to boot off hard drive.

However no idea about scsi in A3000.
 

Offline rockape

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Re: A1200 Slow Boot
« Reply #14 on: October 26, 2015, 12:26:56 PM »
Hi save2600,

Wish someone would solve an issue I've had for years on one of my A2000's with a SCSI CD-ROM. Delay is damn near 30 seconds before the computer finally boots. SCSI is terminated properly as is the CD drive and I've tried every configuration under the sun contrary to common sense, logic or not. Using an A2091 card with 7.0 ROMS too. WTF? If I keep a CD in the drive, the computer boots much faster, but not as fast as it is "supposed" to for an Amiga.

See  http://wonkity.com/~wblock/SCSI/SCSIExamples.html

Quote

"Since most Amiga controllers scan the SCSI bus for bootable devices starting with address 0 and proceeding to address 7, it is advised that you assign address 0 to the boot hard drive, and set "HiID" or "LastDrive" to "On" for this drive in the Rigid Disk Block (RDB).

This will prevent the system from looking for other hard drives with a higher boot priority, making for the quickest booting possible, and preventing the system from trying to boot off of a higher-numbered CD-ROM drive. (Check the Aminet disk/misc directory for RDB utility programs.)"

Off topic but I hope this helps.


Regards, Michael

aka rockape
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