did you play with the brightness/contrast (if it has
both - don't got a V9K nearby, only my Vicki), or if
Brightness and cotnrast are controlled by software (!), there are no user
controls on the monitor. There are a couple of 3-bit resistor DACs
controled by port B of the system VIA
there is static on the crt's face when you power
up?
If there's no provision for an AC plug, then you have
your answer as to where the power comes from. Didn't
Indeed.
Tony Duell provide a pinout? You'll need to check
if a
DC voltage is coming off the proper pin (I'm guessing
24vdc, but I've seen others that are 12vdc). It could
It's 12V. It pweres the CRT heater (11.5V or so) from the 12V line through
a 10 Ohm resistor.
be the video circuitry - do you have any other 5151
type monitors lying around? You could jury rig an
adapter, but you'd have to fiddle with the horizontal
sync inside it, not a big deal, it ought to be
It's actually the VSync that's very different from the MDA monitor (see
my other post for the scan rates).
labeled, but make a mark with a sharpy so you can
return it to the proper setting. Composite mono
monitors won't work (and I'm assuming the V9K ttl
signals).
The sync signals are TTL, the video isn't, it's analogue. A combination
of the video signal, the intesify signal and the contrast DAC.
My best guess is the monitor flaked out, or it's
not
getting power though.
Indeed. I've got schematics in front of me, and have just noticed a fuse
(F901) in series with the 12V supply inside the monitor. I didnt; spot it
for the earleir message. If that's open, the monoitor won't work, of
course, but if it has failed then almost certianly something has blown it.
I just hope your flyback transformer is OK...
-tony