User`s guide

The idea is to quickly warm up the IC. I used a scheme like this on our
early GS and 0911 bombs dropped from 4-5 per day to 2-3 per week. If you can
safely power the bulb via an external power module (e.g. a calculator or radio
'AC adapter') so that the bulb can be ON at least a few minutes before powering
up the computer, 0911 bombs might disappear entirely.
o- Defective keyboard, loose connector on KB, and/or a bad KB cable
Some users report that swapping in another keyboard cured their '0911
crashes. In the same vein, a loose connector socket in the KB or a bad KB cable
would be worth checking for.
o- System noise and/or lowered motherboard voltages
If '0911 crashes suddenly appear after an accelerator or other power-
sucking board is added, it is fairly likely that the added load has increased
system noise and, possibly, also lowered motherboard voltages.
One possibility is that your power supply needs to have heavier leads
swapped in. Also, you may need to jumper some of the power traces feeding Slots
on the motherboard. For more discussion about this see Q&A 005-007 in
Csa2POWER.txt.
A defective power supply on the way to failing is another possibility. A
failing power supply is more likely to be the culprit if '0911 crashes appeared
'from nowhere'-- i.e. nothing was changed, no new board was added, etc..
o- Poorly socketed Expansion Memory card
With power turned OFF, try removing and replacing your Expansion Memory
card.
______________________________
From: Rubywand
006- My GS control panel keeps resetting to the defaults
and forgetting the date between power-ups. What's wrong?
Most likely, your battery-- also called the "BatRAM battery" needs to be
replaced. When the GS is OFF, the battery supplies power to the clock and its
attached 256-byte RAM. This small RAM is where Control Panel settings are
'remembered'.
If, upon power-up, the GS believes the Control Panel settings have been
messed up due to a low battery, it will reset the settings to their default
(check-marked) positions.