juanbanzai wrote:I don't want to hijack my own thread so let me address the CF possibilities. If I decide to repair the d8b, I'd like to do the CF mod to the d8b's power supply unit as well as that seems to be the best solution for trying to solve any issues with failing IDE drives and the excessive noise they bring to any studio. While I'm doing that, I should probably look into calming down the power supply fan and the CPU fan as well. So thanks, y-my-r, for sending that link. One piece of kit we have here at the studio are SATA drives. HUNDREDS of them. If I can find one that's low in size, I can give one of those a try.
Hey Aaron... personally, I wouldn't lose any sleep over '
hijacking' any thread(s), it's not malicious in it's intent - no harm, no foul man. I seriously doubt anyone viewing this is gonna get butthurt either. But back to the show...
I haven't read thru this entire thread, but I'd personally distance myself from any mechanical hard disk with the HDR or D8B pronto. They're old and mercurial at best, and that's IF you can even find a proper one... which means, most likely it'll be more expensive than any compact flash card or solid state disk (
SSD SATA II). They're just more reliable, and their duty cycle dwarfs any hard disk. If you have upgraded firmware supporting larger disk capacity, that's even better yet. I'll use my own architecture as an example... I've upgraded two HDR's in this manner (
one for an acquaintance).
I use a compact flash card back plane bracket adapter for the boot media (
C:\ logically if you're a Windoze user). Inexpensive and easy as hell to install, it also allows easy access to the card media for removal if necessary/required. Inserted into that is a 32GB compact flash card that has the Mackie operating system installed on it. I also installed a floppy disk emulator, and tossed the boat anchor 3 1/2 floppy drive onto the scrap pile... they're as useless as tits on a nun. It's not a question of 'if' it'll fail, only 'when'. The emulator is USB and works flawlessly as intended, but it can be a bear to install into an HDR if a person is uncomfortable taking a computer apart - which clearly you aren't based on reading what I have of this thread (
LOL). I also use removable SSD's in the external drive chain, the physical housing and adapter(s) have all been upgraded accordingly. This is even a little more difficult to install, but if it's done while doing the floppy emulator it becomes a bit less arduous...
All this is contained in a BOM (
bill of material) I compiled, it might even be listed somewhere here on the forums. Y-my-R can help ya out here too, we got his HDR upgraded recently so he can also contribute as he has successfully performed these same upgrades as well.
juanbanzai wrote:I'm also going to try and scrounge up some optical i/o cables just to see if it's something ridiculous like connecting to the d8b that's preventing the HDR from booting... even though I had it boot on its own with a failing hard drive a few weeks back.
In reality, it's just adding another troubleshooting variable to the situation. The HDR should successfully boot to it's interface, it can run (idle) as a 'stand-alone' piece of gear as it were. That would at least ensure the unit is ready to play happily with any other hardware that may be involved, the D8B inclusive.
juanbanzai wrote:Oddly enough, I find myself going back to the motherboard in the HDR as a possible culprit. When the HDS posts, it counts off the internal memory then detects the primary and secondary master drives. The "verifying DMI pool data" text pops up and says "success." There's a quick check to see if a floppy is installed. If not, I can hear the internal drive spin up and the welcome screen appears. After a second or two, the sync card lights up, then the optical cards in the card cage light up. After all THAT happens, the unit stops doing anything else. My point to bringing this up... if this sequence is taking place, and up to this point everything points to a successful boot-up, does this mean that everything on the motherboard is working as it should or could the failed boot-up be caused by some failed component on the board? I only bring THIS up because when I started this whole thing I was under the impression the motherboard was bad.
It sounds good to a point, for me the confusing part is where you describe the sync & optical cards '
lighting up'. I have optical cards in my HDR too, so during this same procedure what is displayed on the vga output AND the fluorescent display on the face of the HDR? What exactly does '
stops doing anything else' mean, is the unit locked up (
frozen)? This would be really good triage information...
juanbanzai wrote:The other thing I'm really trying to get my head around is the constant failure when I try to do a clean OS from floppies. I downloaded two different builds of the HDR install files from the forum database site. Both will not go any further than bringing up some text and seeking the 1st floppy before everything stops. Could there be a setting in the tools.ini file, or in some other file on the 1st floppy, that's not reading my system correctly? Is there any chance the floppy drive itself is messed up??
Yes, it's more than likely that floppy drive has gone tits-up. It's ancient tech, finding one that actually works is becoming rarer day by day. An emulator is an option long term if you ever need a brute force install or (
gulp) want to sell your gear and ensure an easy transition for the next user. Just a personal opinion of course...
Regarding the tools.ini file - it's a text file in reality. An yeah, it certainly could be a show stopper on an install. Just ensure the contents are a duplicate of a known good file - exact copy inclusive of all punctuation... no extra spaces and that sort of thing in any of the key/value pairs. If the file's not using the proper internal format, the os installation interpreter reading that text file will NOT be happy at all...
juanbanzai wrote:Mike, I really appreciate your offer to send a drive. I really don't want you going to all that trouble. I'm going to try and locate another drive today... so would it be possible for you to create an image of that drive and put it some place where I could download it?
If this isn't available here anywhere, just let me know. I could image my cf card and provide a .ISO image (
or other appropriate extension) that you could burn to media with any disk utility.
juanbanzai wrote:Finally... the rail cap issue... the guys here want to take a crack and replacing those caps. But here's the funny thing; before I went to bed last night, I went into my studio and turned the D8B on. I heard a CLICK and the system booted right up! No thumping from the speakers, no bouncing VU meters, and no continuous clicking of some of the faders trying to reset themselves. IS the rail cap issue an intermittent thing, or am I looking at something else?
Mercurial gear... old tech/electronics so anything is possible. These forums are full with tales of audio peril of all manner... (LOL)
Seriously, over the years I've personally experience all kinds of strange (
and at times uncomfortable) issues. Anymore when 'trouble' does happen to arise, I find that disconnecting anything involved from the ac supply (wall or whatever) and walk away for 5-10 minutes. This allows for all non-volatile onboard capacitors & memory the time to drain. The rail caps are protection related, and it's electronics 101. Every TTL component (ic) on the pc boards have a cap that holds a small 5V charge while connected to an external power source (120VAC). This doesn't even account for any other voltage 'rails' (shared dc supply voltage circuits) that may or may not be involved (
12, 16, 48VDC respectively). I once recall when I booted my D8B... it locked up and I was presented with the '
Broadway Lights' display... everything, and I mean everything, was lit up the console. It was beautiful in a macabre sense... never-the-less scared the sh*t outta me initially. I unplugged everything, walked away and got a cuppa coffee. Came back about 5-10 minutes later, reconnected things and hit the '
on' button. Everything came up normally as it would be expected...
juanbanzai wrote:Oh.... did I mention that I really don't like "digital" audio consoles?
You'll love the D8B once you have one up n running... the options available, routing and the workflow amongst other things are like a heroine addiction...
Advance apologies for wasting anyone's bandwidth due to this '
windy' response. If any of this proves to be erroneous, I stand fully corrected.
Which leads to the following, but you knew it was coming anyway so here it is:
[Standard Mgmt Disclaimer] - "Your actual mileage may vary"