I'm repairing and upgrading a Packard Bell system(PB 4220 CD) with a 60 MHz Pentium proc. and Intel 433LX chipset for a friend. I replaced the original 408MB HDD with a 2 GB drive, added more memory for a total of 40 MB (originally was 24MB). While replacing the hard drive found the 40 pin/wire ribbon cable torn across three wires (all 3 open). Replaced the cable did an FDisk and format in preparation to load Win95 (upgrade
from 3.1). However, everytime the system would restart, either automatically during the Win95 loading process or manually by me, the hard drive would not be recognized by the BIOS, nor would it be after rebooting with the reset button or doing a ctrl/alt/del restart after getting the message, "Drive Not Ready Error, Insert BOOT diskette in A:". Even after doing a restart from Win95, the same thing happens everytime! The only way to get the hard drive to come up and boot would be after performing a power off routine by pushing the power button off and on or doing a system shutdown from Windows and then powering off and repowering on again. Of course, this is an AT style mobo and power supply, so the front panel power button is directly controlling (wired to) the power supply. I've tried every option in the CMOS setup, which isn't a whole lot since an OEM version BIOS - AMI BIOS, 1.00.09 BCOR. I've tried setting the various
timeouts and delays for the HDD to different values, then when none of those worked, I reset the BIOS defaults. I configured the drive (both drives in fact, the original 408 MB and the 2 GB) manually and also let the BIOS do it automatically - NOTHING I've tried so far makes a difference! I replaced the 2 GB drive with the original 408 MB drive, and replaced the ribbon cable again, all
to no avail! I have even tried removing all ISA
boards (no PCI cards were installed), all installed SDRAM SIMMS (mobo has integrated 8MB RAM), disconnected the CD-ROM and Floppy data and power cables - still nothing different! I'm tending to believe it's something to do with the motherboard like a jumper in the wrong place maybe - who knows! However, after visiting Ray's Packard Bell site (a great web site for just about anything related to Packard Bell systems) I found what motherboard I'm dealing with (an Intel 520r with an initial 8 MB of Ram integrated on it) and a diagram of the board and jumper ID's and settings. Everything matched for default and normal operation.
Other than this frustrating problem, the system seems to be working well.
Any ideas or suggestions would be greatly appreciated!!!
Thanks - Mal
from 3.1). However, everytime the system would restart, either automatically during the Win95 loading process or manually by me, the hard drive would not be recognized by the BIOS, nor would it be after rebooting with the reset button or doing a ctrl/alt/del restart after getting the message, "Drive Not Ready Error, Insert BOOT diskette in A:". Even after doing a restart from Win95, the same thing happens everytime! The only way to get the hard drive to come up and boot would be after performing a power off routine by pushing the power button off and on or doing a system shutdown from Windows and then powering off and repowering on again. Of course, this is an AT style mobo and power supply, so the front panel power button is directly controlling (wired to) the power supply. I've tried every option in the CMOS setup, which isn't a whole lot since an OEM version BIOS - AMI BIOS, 1.00.09 BCOR. I've tried setting the various
timeouts and delays for the HDD to different values, then when none of those worked, I reset the BIOS defaults. I configured the drive (both drives in fact, the original 408 MB and the 2 GB) manually and also let the BIOS do it automatically - NOTHING I've tried so far makes a difference! I replaced the 2 GB drive with the original 408 MB drive, and replaced the ribbon cable again, all
to no avail! I have even tried removing all ISA
boards (no PCI cards were installed), all installed SDRAM SIMMS (mobo has integrated 8MB RAM), disconnected the CD-ROM and Floppy data and power cables - still nothing different! I'm tending to believe it's something to do with the motherboard like a jumper in the wrong place maybe - who knows! However, after visiting Ray's Packard Bell site (a great web site for just about anything related to Packard Bell systems) I found what motherboard I'm dealing with (an Intel 520r with an initial 8 MB of Ram integrated on it) and a diagram of the board and jumper ID's and settings. Everything matched for default and normal operation.
Other than this frustrating problem, the system seems to be working well.
Any ideas or suggestions would be greatly appreciated!!!
Thanks - Mal