Sorry for talking to myself again on this forum (this isn't the first time), but while I made some progress since I posted last, I ran into a new issue that I could use some input for.
First, since I mentioned that I bought another d8b for parts yesterday... I got that one to work completely. It's running the Mackie OS 5.1 hack with all the authorizations now. 256 MB RAM... all good. This means that I won't part it out to fix my main "previously fully working" one.
But this means that if I get my other one to work completely, I could cascade the two units, for an insane number of channels
(I already have two Apogee clock cards, and one of them already has the WC termination-off mod).
To avoid that this is getting too confusing, I'll have to explain first what units I have, and establish some sort of shorthand for those:
Unit A: Main unit (300 MHz Celeron). Was fully working until 3 days ago. Then it would still boot cold, but after a few minutes, the console went completely dark. A power supply issue, I assume.
Unit B: My preexisting secondary unit, that I used with a ProBox as a controller. The motherboard on this one is fried (keyboard controller chip isn't recognized), but it was based on a Pentium 166 Mhz. I gave up on resurrecting that one some time back. But it still has a functioning Power Supply, etc. I have Unit A & B sitting next to each other, and mostly use them as a mixer and controller, respectively.
Unit C: This is the "parts" unit I bought for cheap yesterday, that turned out to be fully functional after a little bit of troubleshooting. Based on a Pentium 166MHz.
Knowing that I'm just a step away from being able to cascade two d8b's, I'm of course trying to make one fully working one out of Unit A & Unit B.
I figured it would be easier to move the motherboard from Unit A to Unit B, than moving all the components of the power supply. So I did.
What I get now, is that the combined unit boots up normally at first, and the console shows "Mackie OS 5.1" while it's booting... recognizes all the cards, etc. But when the OS is completely up, it gives the following error:
"Error: DSP Control Card not ready. Last Known State:Reset".
I saw that error before, but usually only when I forgot to connect the console or something. But here, the console goes through the boot process, and then I get this same error on the Monitor, and on the Console as well. So, it's a bit different than if it's not found at all.
I tried a number of things already... including swapping that giant cable between the units, trying if I mixed up the Com1 and Com2 connectors on the board. I even swapped out the Host connector on the CPU with it's ribbon cables, thinking that I don't know if the one in the other case worked. Same result.
I tried the console with the other computer, which works fine, so I know the problem is with the computer.
Knowing that the motherboard worked fine before the other power supply sorta-died, the motherboard should be ok as well, unless I fried something while moving it.
Long story short, unless I damaged something else, the issue should be inside the power supply. And that leads me to the question for you guys:
Does any of you know which portion of the power supply may be responsible for the "DSP card" error? Possibly not supplying the needed power to a connector that powers that board in the console?
I do have a suspicion. There is a tiny cable with only two wires, close to the power switch, that goes from the horizontal board, to the vertical one on the side of the power supply. It was hot-glued on, but for troubleshooting, I removed and re-connected it. In fact, to try, I even left it off at some point, and the error was still the same.
So, back to the question... does anybody know? Could it be the connection I'm talking about, or one of the boards this cable connects?
Sorry... I know this question is pretty specific. But having read some crazy in-depth posts on here, before, I was hoping someone might recognize what I'm talking about.
Sorry about the long post! Thanks in advance to anyone who puts some thought to what the issue might be!