T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2346.1 | Workaround... | FRAIS3::ISTURM | | Fri Mar 10 1989 09:09 | 11 |
| If your Clock IC is a MSM62428 Chip then there are some
possibilities...
1st forget the Litium battery , take a 4.5V NiCd Accumulator and
an 470 Ohm resistor to replace the Litium Battery
2nd or take a normal 9 V Battery and put an 4.7 K Resistor in the
Battery Line.
Hope it helps.. Ingo
|
2346.2 | software problem... | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Fri Mar 10 1989 13:05 | 9 |
| It might be that a program has gone berserk and referenced all of
memory, destructively. That would explain the scrambled screen and the
activation of a drive. Storing random garbage into the clock registers
can confuse it. The only way I know of to reset the clock from being
"totally wedged" is to disconnect the battery for a few seconds.
Since you have an A500, and the clock is on the A501, you might be able
to do this by removing and reinstalling the A501.
John Sauter
|
2346.3 | | ANT::JANZEN | Mr. MSI ECL Test | Fri Mar 10 1989 14:09 | 6 |
| Roy at Memory Location could not reproduce the Setclock failure,
so I'll take it home for $15 (and a 3-day vacation watching
taped movies ;-) ).
He says there are no amiaga diagnostic paackages. Seems like a
primo opportunity for someone who knows anything about diags.
Tom
|
2346.4 | Clock Parity error /1.2 | MQOFS::LEDOUX | Reserved for Future Use | Mon Apr 17 1989 16:27 | 14 |
| I beleive you are not alone, I got exactly a similar symptom
with a A2000/HD. The kids were playing with the amiga and
(I guess) they powered off while the startup-sequence was
accessing the clock. This left parity error in the battery
backed up chip (Again just an assumption) and the setclock
program wouldn't work.
I had to re-boot with a 1.2 workbench to get it set right.
(I was just about to short the battery to get it reset).
It seems that 1.2 does something different from 1.3?
Bug or feature?
Vince,
|
2346.5 | | RLAV::WEGER | NJCD SWS, Piscataway NJ. 323-4468 | Mon Apr 17 1989 20:25 | 7 |
|
Have you tried a "SETCLOCK RESET" ?
This worked for me :')
-Bruce
|
2346.6 | It's a bug... | FRAMBO::BALZER | | Tue Apr 18 1989 07:43 | 11 |
| Due to Andy Finkel (author of most BCPL commands), he forgot to
implement some basic reset sequences in the 1.3 version of SetClock.
Though if you run into such problems, try the 1.2 version and best
of all avoid sloppy programs the bust into the RTC registers...
Regards,
<CB>
The Software Brewery
|
2346.7 | Virus? | EUCLID::OWEN | You Are the Everything | Tue Apr 18 1989 09:23 | 9 |
| There is a new Virus floating around (called the AIDS virus, of
all things...) that attacks the clock. It is not yet covered by
the latest version of VirusX, but the next version should have it.
A friend of mine got it, and it seemed that the only way to fix
it was to take out the battery on the clock, put it back in, and
then reset it.
Steve O
|
2346.8 | Shouldn't matter... | FRAMBO::BALZER | | Tue Apr 18 1989 09:30 | 11 |
| re .7
Maybe a virus, but that shouldn't be a problem for well written
"SetClock RESET" command. Anything software can do to the RTC registers
can be undone by other software.
As far as a virus living in the RTC is concerned, this is plain
BULLSH*T. Read the A2000/500 tech docs to learn why...
- <CB>
|
2346.9 | Just the facts mam... | EUCLID::OWEN | You Are the Everything | Tue Apr 18 1989 09:46 | 17 |
|
Don't get upset. I'm just telling you what I saw. My friend who
got the thing is a very experienced Amiga programmer and knows the
machine VERY well. He tried everything he could think of for a
few days.
I was there when he got it. He booted with an infected disk, and
it gave him all sorts of nasty virus messages and did some strange
stuff with the screen. At this point he took out the disk, shut
off the machine for a bit, turned it back on, and then rebooted
on his harddisk.
Sadly enough, these programmers who write virus's are usually better
programmers that Amiga or any other company who writes software
for the Amiga can find.
Steve O
|
2346.10 | Take it easy... | FRAMBO::BALZER | | Tue Apr 18 1989 10:25 | 16 |
| He, I didn't mean to offend anybody here... I'm just so fed up
with these ridiculous clock virus rumours.
As far as booting after an infection is concerned, only a complete
powercycle is the safe way (or making sure that every Reset and
KickTagPointer points towards it should..).
If there is REAL need for a good and total RTC reset program (read
more than five people), the Software Brewery might write one (PD
of course).
Let me know what you think about it.
No hard feelings,
<CB>
The Software Brewery
|
2346.11 | On the other hand there's Tim King | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Wed Apr 19 1989 20:18 | 12 |
| Re: .6
> Due to Andy Finkel (author of most BCPL commands), he forgot to
Andy Finkle would probably die if he heard someone blame him for the
BCPL commands. The BCPL commands are all from Metacomco. They have
been expanded and improved by the folks at Commodore, but they didn't
write them.
Almost all (probably all) of the new commands added the Amiga since
V1.0 of AmigaDOS have been written in C. Not all of the commands
in the C: directory are written in BCPL anymore.
|
2346.12 | Gotta a point there... | FRAMBO::BALZER | | Fri Apr 21 1989 05:00 | 13 |
|
Re: .11
Yup, you're perfectly right there Randy. So I'll carefully re-phrase
my statement into:
Andy Finkel (author of most new C: commands and supervisor of the
DOS = DOS guru)......
Let's put the blame for BCPL in the Amiga-OS where it belongs, on
Mr. Tim King.
- <CB>
|
2346.13 | "No one wants to work on BCPL" | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Fri Apr 21 1989 12:13 | 6 |
| Re: .12
> Andy Finkel (author of most new C: commands and supervisor of the
> DOS = DOS guru)......
Andy would thank you, I'm sure.
|
2346.14 | Clock doesn't keep time. | GIAMEM::LAFLAMME | MIDInet...on the way! | Fri Jun 30 1989 14:01 | 16 |
| I have a problem unlike the first note (.0). My clock has started to
not keep the correct time. I went into preferences (ProWrite system) and set
the clock to the correct time. Then, the clock (on screen) did a jump from
say 10:37 to 10:24. I checked the 10:24 and it was what I had set it to in
Preferences, um, about 13 minutes ago. So I warm start, boot system and it
again says 10:24. Since I waited a couple of minutes, it should have been
later.
Anyway, thinking the ProWrite system disk was thrashed, I booted 1.2
and set the clock in the original Preferences (the one that it came with).
Once again, it screwed up about 5 min. later, and when I warm started again
it came up with the time I set 10 min. ago. Can someone help me with this?
My first impression is a dead battery. Can I just open up the A501
and replace the lithium jobidobi, or am I facing major surgery?
--mikie--
|
2346.15 | It takes two steps | VCSESU::MOORE | Tom Moore MRO1-3/SL1 297-5224 | Fri Jun 30 1989 15:54 | 6 |
| The way I understand it is that there are two clocks in the system. The
AMIGA keeps the time you use and the A501 keps the battery backuped time
which is loaded when you boot. To reset the backed up time you must set
the time in preferences and then issue the commnad "setclock save" or
something like that.
-Tom-
|
2346.16 | clocks | WJG::GUINEAU | | Fri Jun 30 1989 16:15 | 10 |
|
set the time in preferences or in a cli with the data command, then
type setclock opt save.
To reload the time (should be in startup-sequence)
setclock opt load
John
|
2346.17 | Yet another clock not found... | CADSE::CARR | Asleep at the mouse | Tue Oct 09 1990 23:51 | 17 |
|
Got the infamous "Battery backed up clock not found" message last weekend.
Removing the 501 board did nothing to solve the problem, maybe I just
didn't have it out long enough. After a few minutes of poking
through this notesfile and finding this note, a reboot with WB1.2 allowed
me to issue the "setclock opt reset" command.
Question: Why did I suddenly encounter this after almost a year of
pretty much trouble free operation other than an occasional explainable
guru?
Answer: I bought a new game (Anarchy, a Defender-like clone) from
Psygnosis. Obviously it mucks around with the RTC registers. I promptly
returned it. Don't know if other Psygnosis titles do similar things,
but it'll keep me from buying another.
-Dom
|
2346.18 | 1.2 Not essential | WELSWS::FINNIS | | Thu Oct 25 1990 17:28 | 10 |
| re -1
Yes this happened to me also..
However you do not have to use 1.2
With WorkBench 1.3
setclock reset also works.. then do a date and a setclock save
.Pete.
|
2346.19 | no problems with Anarchy yet! | CRISTA::LEIMBERGER | I have my marbles now I want yours | Mon Apr 01 1991 07:16 | 16 |
| >> Answer: I bought a new game (Anarchy, a Defender-like clone) from
>> Psygnosis. Obviously it mucks around with the RTC registers. I promptly
I played Anarchy for a long time on my 2000,and never had a bit of a
problem. It is also one of the few game that run on the 3000 properly. It could
be what you stated is true,but it could also be you were caught in a time warp
when when you booted the system. Seriously! This has happened to many people
under different sets of circumstances. Maybe we should look to the hardware
for answers. Everyone blames software, because you will be running something
when it strikes,but it would not hurt to track mother board revs ect.
as an aside How is the timing on games usually tracked ? if the game
anacrhy runs on the 1000,5000,2000,and 3000 the same when others seem to go
crazy we can assume they use a different source for a timebase. If it is say
the RTC registers then we can look to this a lot in the future because this is
the way all games should function.
bill
|
2346.20 | | CFSCTC::CARR | Guru: a 4-letter word to Amiga owners | Mon Apr 01 1991 13:55 | 7 |
| What munged my clock that weekend could be anybody's guess, but I'd
never had it happen before then, and it hasn't happened since. Could
have been merely coincidence, but Anarchy was the only new piece of
s/w I'd tried that particular weekend. Glad to hear the game hasn't
caused your machine any problems.
-Dom
|
2346.21 | | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Mon Apr 01 1991 17:34 | 9 |
| Re .20:
Dom,
My clock has become munged a couple of times for reasons unknown. The
most likely cause is some kind of race condition in a clock handling
routine that can leave the clock registers in an inconsistent state if
you happen to crash or boot at the wrong moment. Fortunately, the RESET
option works just fine.
|
2346.22 | pure speculation | STAR::GUINEAU | but what was the question? | Tue Apr 02 1991 09:31 | 9 |
| > <<< Note 2346.21 by ULTRA::KINDEL "Bill Kindel @ LTN1" >>>
.
> My clock has become munged a couple of times for reasons unknown. The
> most likely cause is some kind of race condition in a clock handling
> routine that can leave the clock registers in an inconsistent state if
I always figured it was some errant program taking a walk through uncharted
memory, strait across the clock registers.
|
2346.23 | Still another clock problem.... | MEO78B::MANDERSON | Amiga + '030 == MicroCRAY | Wed Dec 11 1991 17:09 | 15 |
| Hi,
I have had the clock on my 2000 wandering for months. It seemed to vary
and gain more under heavy load than at other times like during an
lharc.
I recently upgraded to WB2.04 (yeah - nice...) so I was interested to
see what would happen to the clock. Well it now gains a regular 50%
regardless of the load. I have tried swapping the two serial/parallel
chips but no change.
Any ideas??
regards
kevin
|
2346.24 | | SDOGUS::WILLIAMS | TOPGUN | Wed Dec 11 1991 17:16 | 9 |
| There is a variable cap that controls the clock. If that is off, the
adjustment is absolutely no fun at all. Very small changes make big
differences (is my experiance anyway). If it is your battery, then you
will notice a loss after power off and may even get the
<unset><unset><unset> on setclock. Another not so wonderful scenario
is the possiblility of ripple on the power to the clock. Doest REAL
nasty stuff to the clock. Hope this helps
Clark
|
2346.25 | Tune in your clock? | XSNAKE::WILSONTL | Lead Trumpet (Read that...LEED!) | Thu Dec 12 1991 08:33 | 5 |
| If you've never tuned a capacitor before, be sure you use a plastic
tuning screwdriver designed for the purpose. Metal screwdrivers add to
the the capacitance whilst (Thanks, ALL-IN-1 guys) tuning, thus
throwing your total capacitance out of whack. You can pick one up at
any electronics store.
|