I located this board at a ham radio swap fest in Rochester, NH, in Oct 1998. I bought it for $5.00. The man I bought it from assured me that it worked. I figured that, for $5.00, I couldn't go wrong. Well...
Only after getting it home did I examine it closely. The board had only two jumpers still attached to it! And worse, unlike most boards, it didn't have the settings silk screened onto it.
So, I hopped onto the 'net, figuring that I could find the info there, somewhere.
Jamicon's page is useless. I emailed them, and never received an answer.
driverforum.com has a thread about this board, but no one was able to help anyone there either, except to point them to the useless jamicon page.
I put the board away for a year, and didn't think much more about it, when I was cleaning up my office, and ran across it. I decided to re-try the 'net, and found the same results. Except this time, I emailed a couple people, and one person answers!
Gabriel Cazacu emailed me this Microsoft Excel document, detailing the jumper settings of the board. I've included it because it may be of use, but there were some issues. First, JP12 & 13 on the sheet are 4 pin, on this board there are only three. I also have no information about JP1, 2, 3, 6.
Anyone that finds information can email me at apeale69@hotmail.com
Update! December 22, 1999
I've located the specs of this board, or so it would appear. Vig Atilla was kind enough to mail me a link will all the .jpg's for the motherboard. I have spent many hours to create a .pdf of the specs. It's large, nearly 1.5M, but it's also 22 pages. Hopefully,
someone will find it useful. You can find it here
Update! January 19, 2000
Erik Sorenson has just given me the jumper settings for the AMD K5-133/P75. It wasn't in the
last release.
Also, I've been working on really cleaning up the PDF file, I'm basically making all new images
for the document. I've almost got the motherboard specs all done. The only real reason I'm
doing this (I could just throw all the settings on a few pages) is I'm trying to re-learn
all my old graphic design skills. It's been a while, and I'm rusty. I'm trying to get the manual under a meg. So far, everything looks successful, I've got the original document down from 7.5M to 5.1, and I'm still playing with the images.
Update! March 14, 2001
I'm still here. I simply haven't had much time to work on the manual, what with the birth of my son and all. But I've received several requests recently, most notably from Gene from Canada, who requested the settings for 133MHz chips. After checking the original file, I find that I do have it after all. An update (just the settings for this chip) are available here
Update! June 29, 2001
Even I can screw up sometimes. It seems I've ruffled the feathers of someone. Here's my public apology.
Additionaly, I'm going to make the .pdf smaller and more optimized, really soon. I promise!
I was emailed another page about the KM-S4-1. The whole site's got a lot of great information about a lot of motherboards. Check it out.
Update! October 03, 2001
I've finally optimized the PDF, so now it's like 260K. You can get it here
Update! August 13, 2009
Having no new information on this motherboard, I haven't needed to update this page in a long time. However; if you'll note the "public apology" page the gentleman states he's not using my scans. I guess he changed his mind in the last nine years. If you check the properties of the PDF from the manual you see it was written by "vengnce". That was my former Internet alter-ego.