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HeadStart LX-40, anyone know of it?

Denniske1976

Experienced Member
Joined
Jan 17, 2011
Messages
480
Location
The Netherlands
Hi everyone,

I'm new here so be gentle ;-) My name is Dennis and I'm from Holland, I have a few old computers: IBM 5150, IBM 5155, IBM 5160, IBM 5170, a PS/2 Model 80 (or 60, dunno for sure, that tower model with a 80286 in it and OS/2 1.1 Ext Ed) and also a TRS-80 Model 1 (with level 2 basic).

Next to that I also kept my first computer, a HeadStart LX-40. It's the first PC we got at home way back in 1988 (for me, that's way back). It looks a bit like a HeadStart Turbo-888XT, but has one 1.44M 3.5" floppy drive and one 360K 5.25" floppy drive, it also has a MiniScribe 40MB harddisk (I think one of those 8540XT thingies), an 8088 CPU that does 10MHz as well as 4.77MHz and 640KB memory. It comes with a HeadStart M-888-C screen (4 color CGA). And it had a software bundle that I don't use (FrameWork etc), I currently have MS-DOS 5.0 on it, PC-Tools 7.1 and some games and Word Perfect 5.1.

Anyhoo, onto the problem: The computer still works OK, except in that it sees the 1.44M floppy drive as a 360K floppy drive. Weird thing is, if I put in a 1.44M floppy and do a "DIR A:" I get a directory listing. But when I want to format a disk, the system wants to format 360K in like 9 tracks and blabla clusters. Of course, my B: drive works OK (since that really is a 360K drive).

Strange thing is, other than that I have no problems with the system. No boot failures, no error messages, no "CMOS battery low", no bad clusters on the harddisk (recently reinstalled it with MS-DOS 5.0 etc). There is a jumperblock on the mainbord (and the mainboard is really small, just a handfull of chips and 8 slots and the CPU) but that's only for setting options like CoPro present etc. Nothing for the floppy drives AFAIK. Plus nobody ever touched those jumpers (but I should look em up in the manual).

So uhm, anyone know what's going on? I did change the CMOS battery out of since it was the original anyway and about 22yrs old. But to no avail, last time I used it (was still when I lived at my parents, about 1995 I guess, before I fot my 486 DX2-66), it was still working OK and then retired to the basement. I opened up the PC and everything inside looks OK, no loose cables, not even dust or crap inside (we vacuumed it once every few months).

Tried searching the internet, but other than finding stuff about the HeadStart II and III and Explorer, there's nothing about an LX-40 (40 is probably about the 40MB harddisk) model... only LX-CD (and that's a waaaayyy later model).

So, eventually I ended up here and after reading all the IBM posts and a post about some Dutch dude having 2 broken harddisks in his HeadStart I decided to sign up :) Maybe you guys can help me? It would be really appreciated, since I wanna keep this baby (my first PC that tought me everything I know about DOS, BATCH, BASIC, PKZIP, PKUNZIP, ARJ, LHA and of course Bubble Bobble hehe) ;-)

Thanx for reading and have a good one!

Dennis
 
A 3½-inch floppy drive will require a high-density controller in order to use 1.44 MB disks, which is rare (but not unknown) on XT-class machines. Otherwise with a standard double-density controller it will only read and write 720K disks. In order to format 720K disks at their full capacity, you will need DOS 3.2 or higher and a DRIVPARM command in CONFIG.SYS, such as DRIVPARM=/D:0 if the 3½-inch drive is the A: drive or DRIVPARM=/D:1 if it is the B: drive.
 
GSETUP may do the trick if you find that there's no key combination that will get you into the BIOS setup and you lack a setup program disk.

There is no CMOS on an 8088. ;) Like I said, XTs which support high density floppy drive (from the factory) are rare, but not unknown. My CompuAdd 810 does (HD floppy and Western Digital IDE-XT hard drive controllers are built-in). In this case, the floppy drive types are set using DIP switches or jumpers -- whose settings will unfortunately probably be inscrutable without the owner's manual or other documentation.
 
This sounds similar to a problem I had on my Zenith SupersPORT. It has a 720K floppy, but DOS 6.22 kept treating it as a 360K floppy. I solved this by adding the following line to the config.sys file to specify that it was a 720K floppy drive.

drivparm=/d:0 /f:2
 
There is no CMOS on an 8088. ;) Like I said, XTs which support high density floppy drive (from the factory) are rare, but not unknown. My CompuAdd 810 does (HD floppy and Western Digital IDE-XT hard drive controllers are built-in). In this case, the floppy drive types are set using DIP switches or jumpers -- whose settings will unfortunately probably be inscrutable without the owner's manual or other documentation.

Never say "never". I've had one--and it even used a MC146818 chip. But your exception is noted--such things are rare.

I can't find a thing on the LX40, which makes me wonder what the heck really is under the hood. A DRIVPARM should fix the problem.
 
Hi again, just a quick word from me (I'm at work now) ;-)

Well, dug up the good ol' manual yesterday and opened up the PC. There's one DIP switch bank with 8 switches. According to the manual, the only switch that has anything to do with floppy (I think) is switch 4, in OFF it's "FDC Enabled" (FDC = Floppy Disk Controller?) and in ON it's "FDC Disabled". Funny thing is, the manual that comes with it says "HeadStart LX-40 user's manual" on the cover and page 1 says "HeadStart II" and the system pic in the manual is also from a II (so the slimmer case with 3.5" and 5.25" drives next to each other as to on top of each other in my LX-40). Uhm, harddrive is indeed a MiniScribe 8450XT and both controllers (floppy and HDD) are on board. The display card is some CGA graphics card that has "ATI" printed on it. Funny thing is: it's got a switch to go mono/color and also the mouse (a BUS mouse) connector is on that card.

I do remember that this thing was a bit exotic (as they said in the store back then, V&D in Holland, part of Vendex Holding) as in that it could handle both 720K and 1.44M 3.5" floppies (it can't handle 1.2M 5.25" floppies though, only 360K). From what I know when we got it, we had MS-DOS 3.31 on it. Still have that somewhere, but then my uncle (from whom we got this system) got a 386 and got MS-DOS 5.0 with it. So then we got a copy (on 2 3.5" 1.44M disks) and also installed MS-DOS 5.0 on our HeadStart. Somehow I also got PC-TOOLS 7.1 on the system and that also comes on 4 1.44M disks, so the system always handled 1.44M floppies OK. There was also some kind of tool called "fd.exe" you could load into memory and call with a hot key. That tool would then kind of auto-sense the floppy in drive a (either 720K or 1.44M) and format it accordingly.

So yup, I always had 1.44M support and the fact that it gives a DIR off a 1.44M disk also makes it still read it. But when I start PC-TOOLS (or diskfix.exe for that matter), I can only see drives C: (40M), B: (360K) and A: (also 360K). And when I try to format drive A: it also comes up with a message it will format 9 tracks blabla sectors "type = 360K". If I just press enter to confirm it comes up with "Drive Not Ready: Abort, Retry, Fail?". Could maybe the floppy drive itself be faulty? (also some 3.5" drive with a Philips sticker on).

As for the BIOS, there's an Award BIOS chip on board but it boots with "HeadStart LX BIOS, Vendex Systems 1987-1988" it does not show any "Press ?? key to enter BIOS". But AFAIK that wasn't possible with teh majority of XT computers (?). By the way, there's "Made by Philips Canada" stickers all over the thing. I thought these were made in Korea or something? Oh wait, I know, I have some kind of one off secret government project computer nobody knows of LOL :p

Neh but serious, I'll try to get some pictures up... but if you look in google for a HeadStart Turbo-888XT system, mine looks the same, except with a 3.5" floppy drive as the top drive (the 888XT has two 5.25" above each other). Case looks the same, monitor is also a M-888-C monitor. The rest is pretty standard for the later XT models: 640K memory, the CGA adaptor, oh yeah and I also have an AT style (so F1-F12) keyboard as were most XT's had F1-F10 keyboards (well, at least all my friends had, they didn't have HD 3.5" floppies either and not 4 color CGA).

Well, that's as much info as I can give now... Oh yeah and about that "DRIVEPARM", we never used that in our CONFIG.SYS. It was always a standard CONFIG.SYS that came with DOS (3.31 and 5.0). And the only thing in AUTOEXEC.BAT that's loaded is MOUSE.COM for the BUS mouse. I mostly had around 580K of memory free on this system, I can remember that.

Thanx for all the replies, I really hope I can get this fixed... But since I can't find anything about this system anywhere (never seen one for sale, never seen another person have one, never seen one in a garage sale, never found anything on the internet), there's probably not much I can do about this. Could it be the BIOS chip got corrupted somehow and the drive parameters are off (dunno much about ones and zeros, though). But since there's no way to get into the BIOS of an XT I have no way of checking (or even repairing if it got off/corrupted). Or is that what GSETUP does? I think I'll get some of those old system tools, like sysinfo or something (can't remember the name). You know, those programs that would tell you how fast your PC is compared to the original IBM PC. Those also reported memory, disks etc... see what that comes up with. Maybe it's just PC-TOOLS screwing me over, since I get no errors when booting whatsoever.

@NathanAllan: I also had an Explorer a while back... got it from someone, but when the harddisk died I tipped the system. It was nice though, with the hardrive in a caddy with fan, really funny. I think that one only did 720K 3.5" disks right?

OK, have a nice one again! :)
 
Oh yeah, I'll have a go with setting DRIVEPARM tonight if I have the time for it... I would think that if I set drive 0 to type 1.44M it would actually either work or getting me some kind of mismatch error or something. I'll also see what MS-DOS format comes up with (because PC-TOOLS renames FORMAT to FORMAT! so when using FORMAT the Central Point format/unformat comes up). So if it's just PC-TOOLS being screwy (would be first in my experience... and I've had PC-TOOLS since version 4.3 Deluxe), MS-DOS format would just do 1.44M fine. The floppy I did a DIR on and gave a listing was actually a Linux boot disk formatted in some XP computer, so I think the 1.44M support is still there...

Dennis
 
OK guys,

Made some pictures (with my cell phone, sorry for the quality):

headstart001.jpg


headstart002.jpg


headstart003.jpg


headstart004.jpg


headstart005.jpg


headstart006.jpg


headstart007.jpg


headstart008.jpg


headstart009.jpg


headstart010.jpg


As you can see from the last pictures, the manual is a HeadStart II manual... and only switch 4 is FDC ON/OFF. So uhm, any suggestions? Anyone with a HeadStart II that treated drive A: as 360K??

Maybe I'll make some more when it's back together again... Thanx for reading and have a good one!

Dennis
 
You can always consider disabling the FDC and just inserting an ISA FDC card.
Je kunt ook overwegen om de FDC uit te schakelen en een ISA FDC kaart te installeren.​
 
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Hi Dennis,

What I can find out about your system seems to indicate that it's based on a motherboard manufactured by Samsung for Philips Vendex. You also have a real-time clock that requires that a program called ST.COM be used to read and set the system time (note the coin cell on the motherboard).

Apparently the system was shipped with MS-DOS 3.3H, a sort of Compaq DOS 3.31-lookalike to support hard drive partitions larger than 32MB.

Since you can read a high-density floppy in your A: drive, there's support for it in the system BIOS. All you need to do is tell DOS that you have a 1.44MB drive, which can be done by inserting the following line into the CONFIG.SYS file on your boot (hard) drive:

DRIVPARM=/D:0 /F:7

That's it--DOS will now consider your A: drive to be a 1.44MB unit. If you create a disk to boot from A:, make sure that this statement appears in the CONFIG.SYS for that drive.
 
Hi Chuck (and who else reads this),

Well, tried the DRIVPARM setting and it ended me up having a floppy drive with no format at all :-( Made some more pictures to clear things up (not solving anything unfortunately):

First off, entered the DRIVPARM setting into CONFIG.SYS and rebooted the machine... started DISKFIX (PCTOOLS 7.1) and it gave me this (note, A: has no size/format):
headstart011.jpg


So then I removed the DRIVPARM setting and rebooted, this time booting from a 1.44M floppy disk:
headstart012.jpg

As you can see it boots...

So, after rebooting (because you can't install Linux on a 8088 hehe) I did a DIR A: and this is what showed up (note the "bytes" and "bytes free"):
headstart013.jpg


So, started Norton Disk Doctor... two 360K floppy drives apparently (PCTOOLS 7.1 also thinks that):
headstart014.jpg


Started up CheckIT! (found that still on the harddisk):
headstart015.jpg

Hmmmm, so maybe a 1.44M drive after all?

Did a disk check and it turned out OK:
headstart016.jpg


headstart017.jpg


System Check:
headstart018.jpg


headstart019.jpg


Disk Check:
headstart020.jpg


But when I try PCTOOLS format or MS-DOS format I get this again:
headstart021.jpg


headstart022.jpg


So still unable to use/format/copy stuff onto/off 1.44M disks... weird though that CheckIT! does see it as a 1.44M 3.5" drive (and that should be correct, it has always worked that way without DRIVPARM or anything else). I must say I'm puzzled at this :-(
 
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I still think maybe it has some jumpers or DIP switches set incorrectly, because my CompuAdd 810 also has an Award XT BIOS dated 1989, and yet it supports a 1.44MB floppy drive with no problems in DOS.

Maybe you can try this program, which should tell DOS to recognize the drive as 3½" 720K -- still not correct, but definitely better than acting as if it's 5¼" 360K!

ftp://ftp.oldskool.org/pub/tvdog/tandy1000/misc/setbpb.zip
 
You're running DOS 5.0? Try formatting with:

FORMAT A: /N:18 /T:80

or

[b']FORMAT A: /F:1440[/b]

DOS gets the drive capacity from the boot sector DPB when reading and writing. However FORMAT uses what the BIOS says, which obviously isn't right.
 
OK here's an update... been some time, sorry 'boot that :oops: :oops:

Well, was playing around with my 486 PC and noticed it'd lost all it's settings after being in storage for some months. Pretty weird, so it got me thinking "hmmm, what if I replace the battery in my Headstart" just to make sure. I just got a new CR2032 in my car key, but I'm selling the car next week so I changed the CR2325 cell for that CR2032, it's smaller but fits the socket too.

Powered up the computer and tried reading a 1.44Meg floppy.... works. But, as DIR worked before I also tried formatting it, also worked and PCFORMAT automatically saw it was a 1.44Meg. So, another test: copy some files to A: and that also worked. So changed the floppy for a 720K one and DIR-ed that one -> worked. Tried copying all the files over to C: but that failed at about 70%. SO, started up DISKFIX and did a "revitalize disk", it checked and reformatted the whole 720K disk and after that I could copy everything off!! (it's the original HeadStart floppy that was giving the read error, so had to save that!).

So, long story short -> IT WORKS IT WORKS!! OOOOOHHHH YAAAAYYYYY THE GOOD OLD TIMES!!! Oops, uhm sorry... so it seems the battery was dead? Well, not dead but almost but obviously it had charged enough so the computer wouldn't display a "CMOS battery low!" message :-(

Phew, FINALLY I can start saving those old 5.25" 360K floppies to 720/1.44 floppies :)

Thanx for all the help, you guys have no idea how happy I am that it was only the battery and my VERY FIRST EVER computer works again!!
 
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