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Restoration... what's needed?
First of all, a free confession. I
screwed-up. I was under the impression that this was a 220/240V machine. And I
knew it had been running recently.
So I decided to forgo any
capacitor-reforming, and performed a quick visual inspection for obvious faults,
shorts, loose parts or cables, and shipping damage.
And powered it up.
What's supposed to happen: You flip the main breaker. This sends a bunch
of voltages from the 'AC Board' (essentially an auxilliary PSU) to the Power
Sequence Card. This is a jolly clever bit of logic which monitors things like
overtemperature, overvoltage, undervoltage, and overcurrent. If a PSU fails or a
fault condtion causes a trip, the source of the problem is stored in latches on
the board (as long as the main breaker stays on, that is), and can be read out
by the engineer.
It also monitors the operator power on/off switch. When
you switch 'on', it's supposed to pick relays, starting the fans, the main power
supplies, the drives, and the logic, in sequence - hence the name.
Mine
did no such thing; throwing the power switch did nothing. Nada. Zip.
Started troubleshooting, Went through the doc. Turns out there are a
couple of manual procedures to bring up power - the simplest being 'operate the
main relay by pushing it in with an insulated screwdriver'! Did that... lights,
fans, disk, CRT comes up to a glowing green dot... woo hoo! Nothing drastically
wrong with this system, but there is clearly a PSU problem. Check further.
Turns out I was wrong - it *isn't* a 220/240V machine, it's jumpered for
208V according to the serial number plate. Grrrrrrr. Could that be the trouble?
Overvoltage? Hope I haven't cooked anything. OK, restrap the main tranny (top
left in photo below) for 220/240V and retest. Still nada. Ooooops.
More
investigations... see below.
The PSU with
covers off. Main transformer top left. AC Board bottom centre. Power Sequence
card is the other side of the bulkhead on the right.
After restrapping
for 220/240V, I did more tests. First, the lights didn't behave quite right -
see below. They pointed to a power sequence card problem.
Measured the
voltages at the power sequence card test points... all good except the +5V,
which was loitering around +0.7V. Uh oh. +5V is critical, drives logic on
sequence card, operates LEDs on front panel etc.
Damn bugger blast.
Perhaps my wrong voltage cooked it.
OK, I have another System/32. Remove
the sequence card from it, put it in this machine for testing. Exact same
results! What's going on?
Read the doc again.
Damn bugger and
triple blast. The auxilliary transformer on the AC board - the one that drives
the power sequence card. It *also* has to be restrapped for 220/240V! Use
language against myself which is far too immoderate for a webpage. Swear mighty
oaths concering buggering about with mains voltages & computer restoration
when short of sleep due to 16 month old son with teething
problems.
Restrap the AC Board transformer to 220/240V. Retest. Both
cards still behave identically, showing the same fault symptoms.
OK
three possibilities:
1. Idiot Computer Restorer has seriously buggered both
of them due to wrong voltage.
2. They both have random faults (perhaps not
the same fault) that cause +5V to go down.
3. The fault lies elsewhere.
Datum: remove the power sequence card and check the +5V supply at the
sequence card backplane (or 'Maple' as IBM charmingly term it). Result? +5.0V,
right on the money. So the problem IS in the sequence card(s). Or is it? Where
does the +5V go, apart from the sequence card? We know the sequence card takes
it out to the operator panel, to run the on/off switch and power fail &
thermal fail LEDs. But figuring it out requires learning IBM ALDs - Automated
Logic Diagrams, IBMs idea of a circuit diagram, which are, I'm sure, very good
once you understand them. Right now I feel they would be easier to understand if
written in Welsh. Or Sanskrit.
Check out a few more things. Do cautious
'finger testing'. Ouch!!!!!! The +5V regulator on the AC board gets *very* hot,
far too hot. Last time I saw that was on my Fairlight; one of the boards
had a short to ground. Pulled the board, it came up perfectly. Why is the +5V on
the S/32 at +0.7V? If it was 0V (short to ground or dead regulator) it would be
easier to understand.So is there a high-resistance semi-short to ground
someplace, enough that regulator can drag it up to +0.7V, but also enough that
the regulator roasts in the process? Or is the regulator in fact
bad?
Well... Datum: even with all output cables disconnected from the AC
board (essentially, the ribbon cable in the photo below), the +5V reg *still*
gets hot. So now I think we're looking at an AC board problem; the regulator
itself, or some other part of the +5V circuit on it. It's *nearly* working,
because remember, with no load from the Power Sequence Board, the +5V at the
backplane is correct, even though the regulator is far too hot.
Stay
tuned - or better, if you have a suggestion, get in
touch!
Closeup of AC
Board - the very hot regulator indicated by the red arrow.
Checking the
test points on the sequence card.
Manually pick
the main relay... woo hoo! Power! Lights!
Press 'lamp
test' - more light...!
...on the
operator panel as well. But nothing from 'TH CHK' and 'PWR CHK' - they are
powered direct from the power sequence card +5V, which is where the problem
lies.
Press 'DPLY
PWR CHK' and 'LAMP TEST' together; in this mode, the high byte (leftmost 8
lights) should all light to confirm power sequence card good (or nature of
fault, if faulty). But none of them light - because the fault is, the +5V needed
to drive them is bad on the sequence card (they're driven from the sequence card
in this mode; on a regular 'lamp test' they're driven from the main logic +5V -
totally seperate supply).
Pressing just
'DPLY PWR CHK' - nothing shows. Same reason as above; if there is a fault,
sequence card can't display it due to bad +5V.
The CRT power
is fine tho! Tiny green dot, just looks blurred in this photo.
So what
does it do at present? I can't boot it when I bring up the power manually. Not
sure why; probably some 'power no good' line is being asserted and inhibiting
everything. One thing I've found does work so far; when I select 'ALTER MAR
IRPT' on the CE panel (essentially the same as setting an address on a
'traditional' front panel, the LEDs light up correctly to reflect the address I
dial in with the rotary hex switches. Which is encouraging.
Any other
System/32 owners, or former CEs, *please* get in
touch!
There's almost nothing about this machine on the
web.
http://tinyurl.com/jyul is a link to a usenet
post on Google which gives a fair bit of information about the machine
http://www.fwtunesco.org/musi/wolz/
is an excellent Italian page on the restoration of an IBM 3741 Data Station, a
machine with several similarities to the S/32.