Unix on old-ish machines - advice sought
James Rice
jrice54 at vzavenue.net
Fri Apr 8 06:47:29 CDT 2005
Ethan Dicks wrote:
>On Apr 8, 2005 3:42 AM, C Fernandez <fernande at internet1.net> wrote:
>
>
>>I added a piggyback battery to my IPX successfully...
>>
>>Now that I've done it once, I can't see any reason to by a replacement
>>nvram. I can run to Radio Shack, buy a battery, and have it fixed the
>>same day. The nvram faq actually sounded discouraging when referencing
>>the procedure. However, I think it's the best solution.
>>
>>
>
>I gave my battery replacement a little twist... when I broke the
>connections between the battery and the underlying chip, I attached a
>9V battery lead to the chip in place of the factory battery. I then
>soldered on a PC-mount 3V Li cell (3032?) onto a former 9V battery
>top. I did it that way so I could replace the battery again later
>without having to solder at the chip a second time.
>
>I did a similar trick when I was faced with a dead Dallas DS1287
>clock/SRAM. Used the same Li cell, too, for the test.
>
>-ethan
>
>
>
I solder a 3v coin cell "borrowed" from a dead PeeCee motherboard to the
top of the NVRAM chip and secure it with a little hot glue. Easy
replacement in the future.
--
www.blackcube.org The Texas State Home for Wayward and Orphaned Computers
More information about the cctalk
mailing list