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* GENERAL: Wrong type of serial cable. A specific type of cable is required.

* VINTAGE PC:  Cable attached to the serial port of COM2, but you incorrectly believe that it is COM1.
* VINTAGE PC:  Cable attached to the serial port of COM1, but you incorrectly believe that it is COM2.
* VINTAGE PC:  The serial port you are using is faulty.  Fully check it (including external loopback test) - see the 'Testing a serial port in DOS' section of here.
* VINTAGE PC:  You did not type the MODE and CTTY commands properly.
* VINTAGE PC:  Verify that your first serial port is configured for: I/O port of 3F8, interrupt of IRQ 4
* VINTAGE PC:  Verify that your second serial port (if it exists) is configured for: I/O port of 2F8, interrupt of IRQ 3

* MODERN PC:  The serial port that you are using is faulty.  Test it using appropriate software.

* MODERN PC:  Your serial port is a USB-to-serial adapter, not a serial port built into the motherboard.
                         Just a possibility.
                         On my modern PC, the serial port built into the motherboard works flawlessly with FastLynx.
                         But of two different make-models of USB-to-serial adapters that I have, only one works to transfer the 'bootstrap slave' - see here.