From: "Dave Dunfield" <dave04a at dunfield.com>
Sent: Monday, May 02, 2005 8:34 PM
Hi Guys (well OK - Tony mostly :-),
Started looking at the Compupro 8086 S-100 system this evening.
As usual during initial power tests - pulled all cards, and began
to power-up through variac and series light bulb - Bulb glows
brightly as power comes up, suggesting system is drawing far more
power than it should, and chassis voltages (+8, +16, -16) fail to
come up hardly at all.
After investigating, I discovered that there is a large capacitor
attached to a separate winding off the transformer. This is a
oval metal can capaciter (looks like a cylinder, except that end-
on view would be oval). It reads:
4 MF 660 AC 60 HZ
RONKEN P81A23405H01
Protected 900 AFC
NO PCB'S CONTAINS
FLAMMABLE FLUID
2483
Disconnecting this capacitor "cures" the excess current draw and
the chassis voltages come up fine (still running through variac at
reduced AC voltage with series light bulb as I expect this cap is
part of a "line voltage regulator".
The transformer is labled "C.V." (Constant Voltage?)
I am reluctant to conduct a "full power" test as the light bulb
glows and full intensity if I bring the Variac up to 120v with
the cap connected - ie: the system is appearing as a very low
impedance load - when it should be drawing virtually nothing.
Ohm-meter tests of the CAP show that it is NOT shorted, and is
functioning as a capacitor (brief current flow when leads reversed).
It looks to me as if this Cap is acting as a low impedance load
at 60hz and effectively "shorting" the winding that it is connected
to, which causes the transformer to draw excessive power.
Can anyone explain to me what is going on, and why the unloaded
power supply is drawing so much on it's input? A brief tutorial
on how this type of supply is supposed to work would be very
helpful...
Regards,
Dave
--
dave04a (at) Dave Dunfield
dunfield (dot) Firmware development services & tools:
www.dunfield.com
com Collector of vintage computing equipment:
http://www.parse.com/~ddunfield/museum/index.html
My favorite chassis, it is a constant-voltage you need to keep the capacitor
connected. CVT's are found on two S100 manufacturers - first TEI and later
CompuPro. On systems like Cromemco's the power-supply runs high and the
more cards you add (more load) the closer to 8v you get on the 8v line
(starting at up to 11v), with CVT power-supplies it should stay near 8v
independent of load.
Do check that the other capacitors (filter) are not shorted.
Randy
www.s100-manuals.com