On Sat, Oct 10, 2015 at 2:38 PM, tony duell <ard at
p850ug1.demon.co.uk>
wrote:
>
> From a quick glance at the schematic I think that this part is related
to
the fan
driving circuitry. The diodes look like some kind of protection
Yes.
diodes which is good to have when switching
inductive loads. I have
really
no idea why they have been removed. But I
don't think it is related to
the
Remember that said diodes do slow down the decay of the current (and thus
the magnetic field) when the transistor turns off (this can be a problem
with
solenoid drivers for paper tape punches, etc). It is possible that with
the diodes
in-circuit the fan drive waveforms were not right.
PSU not working at all.
Correct. The fan driver is powered by the 36V output of the 'memory'
SMPSU,
Even if it is defective, the bias supply should
run, the logic supplies
should come
up in the ON position of the key, and so on.
That 'bias/interface' PCB contains (at least) the bias supply chopper and
control
circuit; the fan driver; and the control logic to start the 2 main PSUs
in
the correct
posiitions of the keyswitch,
-tony
/Mattis
Thanks for the explanation. I tacked on some wires to the bias board (to
bring them out for safe probing); the wires are connected to the 5V logic
supply and the +12V bias supply and I get nothing at all out of them when
the H7140 is turned on.
Then I would check the circuitry on page 3 of the schematic on the bias
board. Use a insulation transformer (and possibly a variac) and check
voltages here. Does the 555 has supply voltage?
Does the 16.5V zener operate correctly? Is Q6 ok? If yes, is there a
waveform on 3 of the 555? What is the signal like on base Q1? Collector Q1?
(probably nothing since you don't have any bias voltage)
I'm slowly coming to terms with the schematic but
I'm not quite clear where
these two voltages are being generated. I note from the block diagram that
the +15 and +12 are rectified on the motherboard (backplane) -- which
should make it GREAT fun to probe. So it looks like some careful
disassembly is now required (unless there's a trick to probing things on
the backplane...)
The bias voltage is generated by the chopper on page three in conjunction
with T1 and some rectifying diodes on the motherboard. Then it is feed back
to the bias board on J2:2 to produce the 5V. (page 2)
Good luck!