OK, for a little on topic. Before I go tearing the whole machine apart.....
Actually, they're not that difficult to work on.... I've had one
_totally_ apart (including the PSU and monitor sections) and I've done a
lot worse.
I am the proud new owner of a nice example of the IBM 5155. This thing is in
pretty good shape. Turned it on, A: did a quick seek and the I was into
BASIC. So far, so good. Now, I'm trying to boot DOS. I have several known
good DOS 3.1 boot floppies on 360K disks. I keep an old 486 with a 360K
drive just for this (and for creating disks for my Tandy model 4).
Anyway, the original A: drive only gives a "boot failure". The B: drive
(after a cable swap) boots sometimes. Taking out these drives looks to be a
MAJOR undertaking. Not along the lines of multiple years, but they are
I assume you've got the case off, and the upper shield over the logic
boards (if it's present, it wasn't fitted in all machines).
To get the drives out, you take out all the expansion cards behind them,
and unplug the cables. On the right side, you remove the metal bracket
that supported the back end of the drives and loosen the front mounting
screw. On the left side, AFAIR, there's only one screw which, again, you
loosen. You can get a 3/16" AF spannee in there, I think even a small
socket and right-angled bar will go in. The drive then slides out
backwards. You have to remove the top drive before the bottom one (and
put the bottom one back in first.
pretty securly installed. However, I'd like to
keep them because they have
the IBM faceplate.
Now, for the questions...
Are these Qume drives subject to any known failure? Should I just dig in,
remove these drives and give them a good cleaning and lubricating? I'm used
Certainly clean them. A trace of lubricant on the head slide rails can't
hurt, but only a trace. You might want to dismantle the spindle assembly
to lubricate its bearings too. I forget exactly how to do this (and while
I have a scheamtic of these drives in the IBM O&A TechRef, I don't have
the Qume service manual), but normally the rotor comes off the bottom
either by 3 screws holding it to the hub or by a central screw which may
well be _left handed_!
to working with the big 8" drives, where
everything is a bit larger. What is
the best way to clean the heads? Lint free swab and 90% Isopropyl alchohol?
Cleaning disk? Nail file ;-) What's the consensus?
Cotton bud (or swap) and pure isopropyl alcohol (propan-2-ol).
Any suggestions or comments in general about this machine?
It's a PC/XT at heart. The motherboard is the IBM PC/XT board, and it'll
therefroe take the 640K mod (which I am sure is well-known). The video
card is the nromal CGA card, the floppy controller is also normal. Any
other I/O cards are optional, but if they're IBM ones, they're the
standard IBM ones.
The PSU is similar to the PC/XT PSU, but not identical. Mine looks to
have been made by Zenith. The monitor has a sompositie video input which
is connected to the 4 pin header on the CGA card that was originally
intended for an RF modulator.
The keyboard also seems to be the PC/XT one, in a different case.
Anything else you need to know? I have the IBM Techrefs covering this
machine, so I've got full schematics, etc.
-tony