Thanks Gary.  I have not been using Deluxe but maybe that is the trick versus 
the Basic trial version.  I also expect CPU cache is involved here somewhere.  
I do have the COM port FIFO turned OFF.

-mike/w5jr

--- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, "Gary" <n6...@...> wrote:
>
> Yes. I'm running it fine on a PIII and can read and write with 100%
> reliability. The trick is to lauch MoSlo twice in a row. I'm using the
> latest version known as MoSlo Deluxe for DOS. If you are as well then try
> lauching MoSlo once then launch it a second time. You'll see an odd
> processor speed show up after the second execution of MoSlo but ignore it
> and move on to running the RSS. I've tried it on several PIII's with both
> DOS 6.22 and Win 98SE operating systems (Win 98SE booted to DOS of course)
> and every one works equally well.
> Gary/N6LRV
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
> [mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Mike/W5JR
> Sent: Friday, December 25, 2009 8:58 PM
> To: Repeater Builder
> Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Programming Moto X9000 on a P1
> 
> Oh, great wizards. I have an aging, fragile 386sx laptop that has faithfully
> programmed my X9000 radio for years. I also have a Compaq LTE P1 120 that I
> program all of my other Moto radios with successfully except for the X9000.
> On the Compaq, I have tried booting to real DOS6.22 from a floppy (Windows
> 98SE DOS gives same problem). Using moslo, the X9000 program launches just
> fine but I am unable to read the radio. I receive the dreaded "Serial Bus
> Failure. Power Fault." message.
> 
> I can only guess that the computer speed still hoses the serial port despite
> using moslo to dial back the computer. I have read through all of the
> repeater-builder and Blenderman sites on the issue. 
> 
> Has anyone made the X9000 program work on a P1?  If not, I guess I'm going
> garage sale shopping. 
> 
> Thanks  
> 
> Mike/W5JR


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