*** Feature/3 page/ 1811 words/4 grabs/ Steven Balgey ** *** HEADLINE:Dr Steve's House of Upgrade Horrors *** *** STANDFIRST:Upgrading an Atari is normally a simple process, but sometimes things go wrong and the process then becomes far from simple. *** In the summer of 1995, I decided to add a hard drive to my Atari STe. I searched the adverts in Atari World and settled upon a 365Mb drive from Compo, which included all necessary leads and software for the ST. I then had the intolerably long wait for the drive to arrive... It arrived the next morning, so I hooked the drive to my STe. After switching on the drive, and listening to it spin up, I switched my monitor and STe on. The computer boots off the hard drive. The hard drive software recognises the six partitions already installed on the drive, and soon I'm looking at the standard TOS desktop. Yet, it isn't the desktop I'm used to, there's an extra icon for drive C:. After installing icons for the other partitions, I began to install software onto my hard drive, starting with the Forget Me Clock software. I then installed MagiC 2 and rebooted so MagiC was running. I followed and began to install SpeedoGDOS 5. The installation program ran and appeared to install, but open looking in the folder containing my Speedo fonts I found that the file names were all corrupted. I thought this was probably due to the Speedo install program not liking MagiC. So I reset, and used the GE-Soft setup program to format the drive. All appeared to be working fine, the drive was making chugging noises, but after a while the chugging stopped but the red activity light stayed on. After a while, I decided this wasn't meant to happen so I switched everything off and went and had some lunch. After lunch, I tried to format it again, and it still hung. I decided it wasn't software incompatibility, as it shouldn't hang whilst formatting, so I decided to ring the Compo help line, but the repair guy wasn't available and I was told to ring back later. I decided to try again, while I waited to ring back . This time it formatted, so I proceeded to partition it. I then started installing software again, but I decided to leave MagiC out in case it was causing problems. I installed some software with no problems, so I played about for a while but things started to corrupt again. I was beginning to think that my STe had one of the DMA chips which can cause problems, my STe was made in 1990 and so was quite likely to have one of the problem chips. I had checked my DMA chip before I had ordered my hard drive and it was labelled CO25913-38, but old ST magazines suggested the problems were with the CO25613-38 chips. I decided to ring the Compo help line again and ask them what they thought, I was told that the CO25913-38 chip could cause problems and that it would cost œ50 to replace it. I decided to try the hard drive out on an ageing STFM with TOS 1.02, and to see if this would eliminate the drive and controller from being the problem. The STFM gave some surprising results. It certainly wasn't working, sometimes it would boot up, and other times it would bomb whilst scanning the partitions. I decided that it was probably the drive or controller at fault, but to be certain I decided to take it with me to my Grandad's the next day and try it on his TOS 1.04 STFM. The drive formatted and worked perfectly with my Grandad's computer, so it was reconnected to my STe. Suprisingly, the drive appeared to be working, so I installed some software and used it for a while. Whilst I was reading my mail from the NeST on-line network, my message base became corrupt and the messages were all made up of funny characters. I decided there was something wrong with my hard drive. The next day, I rang Compo again and explained the problem to them, they suggested that the Top-Link hard drive controller was probably at fault and suggested I send this back to them. I returned the controller to them with a letter explaining the problems I was having. A new Top-Link controller arrived after a few weeks, and my STe was reconnected to the hard drive and I formatted the drive and began installing software again. This time, there was no problems everything was working fine, or so it seemed... A couple of weeks later, Atari World issue 6 landed on my doormat. Whilst reading this issue, I noticed a letter saying people with the CO25913-38 DMA chip could have problems using hard drives. I thought to myself, I haven't. A few days, later I was using my STe quite extensively on a Sunday afternoon, it had been on since around 12:00pm and I was busy programming with Lattice C. The compiler kept coming up with errors, I looked the error up in the manual which said that the some of the files the compiler was producing were invalid. I looked at the directory, were my source files were and sure enough the directory was corrupted. I decided that I must have a dodgy DMA chip in my machine as my STFM could still read the drive. I was a bit annoyed at this point as I had a physics essay that had to be in that week, and it would be quite difficult to do with my STe out of action. Anyway, the next day I rang up Paul Rossiter and asked if he could repair my machine, he said he could and as I live relatively close to him to drop the machine off in the evening. With my STe, at the repair shop I was forced to use the STFM to write my physics essay, which was a bit of pain, having become used to the speed of the hard drive. Anyway the next day, Paul Rossiter phoned to say he'd fixed the machine, so I collected it and set it up with the hard drive. Both, have performed fine since, touch wood. And I even managed to finish my physics essay on time. *** Pictures *** Fname: CRRPTDIR.GIF Caption:Corrupted directories, I saw a lot of these when trying to get my hard drive to work. Fname: 1MBMEM.GIF Caption:It took six months before I finallt managed to get this on my Grandad's Atari. Fname: DESKTOP.GIF Caption:This isn't the desktop I'm used to, there's an extra icon for drive C, my hard drive. Fname: FORMAT.GIF Caption:The only indicator the drive is doing anything is a quiet chug noise it makes, but if that stops you'll wait for eternity.