HP Draftmaster RX pen plotter needs love

Pete Lancashire pete at petelancashire.com
Fri Nov 11 23:17:28 CST 2016


Are you saying there is a -12V test point and there is nothing there ?

If +5 is 400mV high, that's not dangerous but it is something I'd take care
of first.

-pete

On Fri, Nov 11, 2016 at 8:35 PM, Michael Newton <michael.newton at gmail.com>
wrote:

> Thanks for the encouragement. I'm going in.
>
> I found test points on the power supply/motor driver board as detailed in
> Chapter 12 of that manual.
>
> +5v, +12v, +15v, +42v and +85v are all there (and all .4v high or so)
>
> But there is no -12v. That seems relevant.
>
> The capacitors all look OK to the naked eye.
>
> Actually diagnosing and repairing electronics is new territory for me, but
> I suppose this is where I read up, maybe pull that board out, and start
> testing diodes and caps.
>
> Thanks again Alexandre - and if you or anyone else has any clues to narrow
> it down, please share.
>
> M.
>
>
>
>
> On Fri, Nov 11, 2016 at 3:38 PM, Alexandre Souza <
> alexandre.tabajara at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > How is the power supply? All rails ok? Input/output capacitors not bulged
> > nor leaked?
> >
> > 2016-11-11 21:36 GMT-02:00 Michael Newton <michael.newton at gmail.com>:
> >
> > > I acquired a working HP Draftmaster RX (HP part # 7596B).
> > >
> > > An awesome machine, 36" roll feed and 8 pens, complete with several pen
> > > carousels, user manual, and hundreds of working pens.
> > >
> > > I was very excited to make a splash in the art world with this thing. I
> > did
> > > get it to perfectly draw a 3 color demo page from the front panel.
> > >
> > > Thereafter it started displaying errors on the display such as "200"
> > which
> > > means it needs "mechanical calibration".
> > >
> > > Thanks to hpmuseum.net I acquired the service manual
> > > <http://www.hpmuseum.net/document.php?hwfile=1292>, which catalogs
> many
> > > calibrations and self-tests to run from the front panel, including the
> > > aforementioned "mechanical calibration".
> > >
> > > So I power up with the appropriate front panel keys depressed to run
> this
> > > calibration. The paper drive motor starts making noise, but the paper
> > > rollers aren't turning, and the LCD display is blank.
> > >
> > > Since that moment, the LCD display is always blank so it is currently a
> > > boat anchor.
> > >
> > > It's a terribly sad state of affairs. I have basic electronics and
> > > mechanical skills and an oscilloscope so following the troubleshooting
> > > procedures in the manual I might be able to identify a part to replace.
> > But
> > > of course, parts for sale online are are rare, expensive, used and
> > probably
> > > untested.
> > >
> > > Probably better would be lower-level repair of whatever parts are
> faulty
> > > but that's probably more than I can manage at my skill level.
> > >
> > > I'm in Seattle, WA. Is there anyone alive in the pacific NW who will
> pay
> > a
> > > visit and help me fix this thing? (The only company I found that admits
> > to
> > > working on pen plotters is 360tech in Austin, TX.)
> > >
> > > Or someone elsewhere I could ship electronics parts to for test and
> > repair?
> > > Or provide guidance, or help in any form at all?
> > >
> > > thanks
> > > M.
> > >
> >
>
>


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