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- Path: sparky!uunet!destroyer!gumby!wupost!crcnis1.unl.edu!price
- From: price@helios.unl.edu (Chad Price)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.zenith
- Subject: Re: Zenith memory board
- Date: 19 Nov 1992 00:09:48 GMT
- Organization: University of Nebraska--Lincoln
- Lines: 98
- Distribution: na
- Message-ID: <1eem0cINNfc4@crcnis1.unl.edu>
- References: <1992Nov18.183015.1901@serval.net.wsu.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: helios.unl.edu
-
- kirk@beta.tricity.wsu.edu (James Kirk) writes:
-
- >I have one of the old 16Mhz 386 boxes. It has two of the 1MB
- >memory boards in it. I seem to recall some time ago that
- >somebody posted a way to make these take four meg. I know the
- >holes are all there for the 20 pin sockets but there was some
- >other stuff two. Does anybody recall what the process is our can
- >you e-mail that posting to me?
-
- >thnx in advance
-
- Zenith 386/16 Memory Board Conversion: 1 MB to 4 MB (Z505-Z515 ??)
-
- Cost $230 (Fall '91), PLUS lots of time
-
- Parts list: 36 18-pin DISP IC sockets, 36 M1000-10 1MBit x 80 ns DRAM chips,
- a 444-529 PAL and a 444-530 PAL
-
- ***
- Initial Caveat: DO NOT start this project unless you have lots of experience
- soldering and desoldering components from printed circuit boards. It requires
- sucessful completion of around 1500 soldered connections.
- ***
-
- Source of Procedure and parts: Henry Fale, Quildata, Inc, 2618 Penn Circle,
- Sheboygan, WI 53081, (414) 452-4172. Published in the Zenith Users
- Group magazine, Remark, June 1991.
-
- Step 1: Remove all 36 256KB chips from their sockets
- Step 2: Remove all 36 256KB chip sockets from the board by desoldering and
- removing the sockets. If desoldering all pins at once, the socket can
- be popped off of the pins first, and the pins removed separately.
-
- DANGER: do not simply shove a screwdriver under the sockets to pop them off.
- This WILL scar the board and damage the traces, thus renering the board
- useless without wire patches to correct the broken traces. There is no
- commonly available circuit diagram - you have to figure it out
- yourself.
-
- Step 3: Solder 36 1MB chip sockets into the previously unused pin holes which
- are adjacent to and overlapping the 256KB pin holes from which you
- just removed the sockets.
-
- Step 4: Move 3 resistors into different positions on the board:
- R405 and R406 go to positions R404 and R407 (marked on board already)
- R410 goes to R414.
-
- Step 5: the PAL in socket U464 (444-558) is removed and replaced with PAL
- 444-529
-
- Step 6: the PAL in socket U470 (444-559) is removed and replaced with PAL
- 444-530
-
- Step 7: Get out your owners manual and adjust the switches for the correct
- amount and location of the memory.
-
- Notes: I had a friend taking a course at the local community college who
- originally volunteered for this as part of the learning process. This
- is a nice idea, but not smart on my part. Removing the 256KB sockets
- is a lot of desoldering, and if the equipement is not in good shape
- the sockets are hard to remove. Considerable damage to the traces on
- the board resulted. Another friend, who has considerable experience
- at board-level diagnostics was able to recreate a circuit diagram of
- the memory chip addressing, given that I had access to the pin-outs
- for the 1 MB chips. This took quite a while, as the board is 4-layer.
- We jointly recommend extreme care in removing the 256KB sockets!!!
-
- End Result: I now have a 386/16 with 8MB memory (I already had a 4 MB board
- installed that I paid $2000 for when I bought the PC in 1988).
-
- Windows 3 runs much faster! (it has a good solitaire game)
-
- Using Word Perfect Office Shell 3.0, I can load all of the software
- I want to, and as long as I'm somewhat careful about the order of
- program exit (not swapping), I have no problems. Multiple copies of
- Advanced Revelation database, Lotus 123, compilers, and Word Perfect
- all load into memory at once for context switching which is much
- faster that it could possibly be with swap to disk.
-
- Now if only IBM is not lying about the capabilities of OS/2 2.0
- (sigh - fat chance)
-
- Fall '92 Addendum:
- I abandoned Windows 3.0 for a "Real" operating system, and put OS/2 2.0
- in it this spring. Except for the slowness (mostly of the disk drives)
- it works fine.
-
-
- Signed: a happy OS/2 user (still not running Windoze software)
-
- chad price
- price@helios.unl.edu
- price@cse.unl.edu
-
- --
- chad
- price@helios.unl.edu
- cprice@molecular.unmc.edu
-