BTW guys,now that I have mastered my harddisk problems, you might be interested
to hear the followup story:
When I bought my new harddisk, I decided to take the plunge and add more
memory to my system as well. The manual said, my motherboard, a Gigabyte
6BXE for a Pentium-II 450, could use up to 256 MB SDRAM DRAM modules
with either 66-Mhz or 100-Mhz speed, so I wanted to buy an additional
128 MB module at 100-Mhz.
Unfortunately that was impossible, they had only 256 MB modules. When I
came home and looked at what I had bought I noticed the PC133 label and
went back the next day to ask whether they had given me the wrong one, I
needed PC100.
Well, they told me it was an Infineon multi-sync module and backwards
compatible to 100-Mhz and even 66-Mhz so I went home again to try it
out. However, with the new module and my old one (a 128 MB) in the
system, the BIOS counted only 256 MB. So I thought, hmm, it seems to
hide the old module, and went back again.
The PC-shop guys said it could be an incompatibility in access time, for
example the new module having 6 nanoseconds and the older one 8 - they
didn't accept to take it back for a refund, instead I should sell the
old one on ebay. Back at home again, I found that after removing the old
module, I could see only 128 MB of RAM. Huh?
Again at the dealer, I was told that my board apparently doesn't accept
single-threaded 256 MB modules. "single-threaded"? Never heard of it.
However, the contacts and chips on the DRAM module can be on either one
side of the modules or on two sides. They exchanged the module against
some with chips and contacts on both sides.
Fortunately the new one works flawlessly and I now have 384 MB on this
system. FS2002 seems to work more smoothly with it than with 128 MB.
Regards,
Guido
-OLR.PL v1.81-