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How do I put a wait state in an Award BIOS?

 
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duchesz
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Joined: 13 May 2003
Posts: 2

PostPosted: Tue May 13, 2003 2:46 pm     Post subject: How do I put a wait state in an Award BIOS? Reply with quote

I put a BioStar M6VLR motherboard in a box with a 1.1 GHz chip. It has an Award BIOS. I'd always been able to run a DOS based program (medical application) on the prior board which also ran this chip without any problems. Now I get a "divide overflow" error message everytime I try to run the program. I'm told this indicates the board is running too fast for the program and I have to put a "wait state" or two in the BIOS.

How do I do this? Is that done using the bank interleave or DRAM clock function?

Thanks
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NickS
BIOS Bodhisattva


Joined: 03 May 2002
Posts: 3143
Location: Thames Valley, UK

PostPosted: Tue May 13, 2003 3:56 pm     Post subject: Reply with quote

What was the fastest machine it ran on successfully ? I don't think patching the BIOS will help.
Take a look at http://www.serviceuk.com/q005.html - the "slowdown" utility may help you
(or http://www.geocities.com/disk_operative_system/dir/dl/slodn200.zip - Slowdown 200).
Another thought - turn off cache (both internal and external) in the BIOS.
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duchesz
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Joined: 13 May 2003
Posts: 2

PostPosted: Tue May 13, 2003 11:32 pm     Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks.......Here's the sad story.....

My client sent me his machine (he's in Puerto Rico, I'm in California) and when I'd "tweaked" it to run the software perfectly, I sent it back. As the delivery guy walked up to my client's office, he dropped the box! The result was a badly damaged motherboard. Soooooooooo, he had the same motherboard put in with the same speed CPU chip but.......now he gets this "divide overflow error" message.

Obviously he's afraid to send the box to me again so I'm trying to find the answer and get him up and running again.

I'll test the "Slowdown" program....the second site wasn't accessible.

Thanks for the great idea!
Me[/i]
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NickS
BIOS Bodhisattva


Joined: 03 May 2002
Posts: 3143
Location: Thames Valley, UK

PostPosted: Wed May 14, 2003 12:12 pm     Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
Another thought - turn off cache (both internal and external) in the BIOS.
This can have quite an effect as well Wink
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