Hi Karen:

On Mon, 26 Mar 2001 18:30:04 -0500 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> hi folks,
> no idea where to post j ustnow, if this makes it i g ues i will know.
> i understand that you can find hd controler cards that have their own bios
> on them?  if so where and how difficult are they to install.
> serious answers only please.  i am using dos 6.22 *not windows!*
> thanks,
> karen
> Live Long and Prosper
> Karen Lewellen, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Hi Karen:

In the days before computers were equipped with a BIOS on the motherboard,
(I am speaking of the days of the XTs) you had to get a controller card
that was capable of holding some setup data specifying such things as your
hard drive type, number of heads, cylinders, sectors, and tracks, etc.
Some types of controller cards had this data permanently fixed on a ROM on
the controller card.  Your hard drive had to be one that was perfectly
matched for the controller card.  The controller card would work only with
one specific hard drive type.  Assuming you had the right hard drive and the
right controller card, installation of both was a snap.  There were other
types of controller cards produced in those days which had some kind of
flash rom.  Your hard drive settings had to be programmed into the flash
rom by running some kind of debug program that directly addressed the flash
rom on the controller card.  There were debug programs published in manuals
for various hard drives.  I actually did this once, and to my grand
amazement it even worked!  You could say this flash rom was really some kind
of BIOS of sorts.  AFAIK, all of these controller cards of the type I am
describing here were eight bit cards and they were for MFM hard drives and
all of them were for XTs.  If you have a BIOS on the motherboard, as in the
case of an AT, then you would have no use for a BIOS on the controller card.

All the best,

Sam Heywood
-- This mail was written by user of The Arachne Browser - http://arachne.cz/

To unsubscribe from SURVPC send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with 
unsubscribe SURVPC in the body of the message.
Also, trim this footer from any quoted replies.
More info can be found at;
http://www.softcon.com/archives/SURVPC.html

Reply via email to