Great news, congratulations! I am about to see if my H7826 works tonight
after cleaning it up and replacing a few electrolytic capacitors.
Regards
Rob
-----Original Message-----
From: Aaron Jackson [mailto:aaron at aaronsplace.co.uk]
Sent: 01 November 2017 18:25
To: rob at jarratt.me.uk
Cc: 'General Discussion: On-Topic Posts' <cctech at classiccmp.org>
Subject: Re: H7861 PSU issues
Picked up a few 555s and sockets and now it works! I am very happy. Going
from not knowing how switch mode power supplies work, to watching some
YouTube videos, and then finally being able to debug the problem and fix
it was
a lot of fun.
I wonder what will die next.
Thanks,
Aaron.
Rob Jarratt writes:
> I had a dead 555 on a completely different PSU, so it could be worth
> checking. I socketed it when I replaced it so it was easy to replace
again.
>
> Also, just because a capacitor doesn't appear swollen or show signs of
> leakage, it seems that this doesn't necessarily mean that it doesn't
> need replacing. In yet another PSU that I repaired recently, replacing
> the capacitors fixed it, although in the end I think the one that
> really fixed it was showing signs of leakage. On a lot of caps that I
> replace they show no leakage signs, but I do see a bit of a deposit on
> the negative terminal, I am not sure if this is a sign of any kind of
problem.
>
> Regards
>
> Rob
>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: cctech [mailto:cctech-bounces at
classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of
>> Aaron Jackson via cctech
>> Sent: 31 October 2017 21:26
>> To: cctech at
classiccmp.org
>> Subject: Re: H7861 PSU issues
>>
>> Just had another look after watching a video about how switch mode
>> power supplies work.... On the small control board connecting to J4,
>> there are
> two
>> D44Q1 transistors. As expected, there is about 65KHz going into the
>> base
> of the
>> transistor for the 5V side. However, there is no signal going into
>> the
> base of the
>> transistor for the 12V side, from pin 3 of the 555. So, it looks like
>> the
> problem is
>> coming from around here. I measured the suspicious components around
>> the
>> 555 and they seem fine.
>>
>> How likely is it that the 555 is dead? There is 10v going into pin 8,
> which I
>> believe is correct.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Aaron.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Aaron Jackson writes:
>>
>> > Hi everyone,
>> >
>> > I've been trying to figure out what is wrong with the 12V rail on
>> > my
>> > H7861 (BA11-S) power supply. It's showing about 4.2V. The 5V rail
>> > is spot on.
>> >
>> > Page 39 of the following schematics is the main part board of the
PSU.
> >
http://bitsavers.org/pdf/dec/qbus/MP01233_BA11-S_schem_Mar81.pdf
> >
> > Going into the collector of Q3 is about 80V coming straight from T2
> > (I think I measured it at about 100Hz), but the emitter is putting
> > out the 4.2V, which is the same as the base voltage and output
> > voltage. I tried replacing this transistor because the hFE was
> > about 80 and a good one was about 120. Unfortunately it didn't do
anything.
> >
> > None of the capacitors look swollen and I don't see any leakage.
> > There is a smaller board which I think goes into J4. The 12V side
> > seems to have a 555 timer and adjusting the pot doesn't change the
> > voltage at all.
> >
> > My understanding of switchmode power supplies is very poor. Does
> > anyone have some pointers on what to check or what might be the
> > possible
> cause?
> >
> > Hopefully I can get my PDP up and running again... Only got about
> > 20 minutes use out of it.
> >
> > Thanks!
> >
> > Aaron.
>
>
> --
> Aaron Jackson
> PhD Student, Computer Vision Laboratory, Uni of Nottingham
>
http://aaronsplace.co.uk
--
Aaron Jackson
PhD Student, Computer Vision Laboratory, Uni of Nottingham
http://aaronsplace.co.uk