HP 2100A Restoration
COURYHOUSE at aol.com
COURYHOUSE at aol.com
Tue Aug 2 11:57:22 CDT 2016
Back in the day we were running and selling 2000 gear in the 80's never
had a bad power supply. one fan died in our 2000 F/ access system and
rather than tear it down to replace the fan.... just bolted a mother of a
fan to the back of the processor over the space the dead fan was.
Like the story of the shoemakers kids that never got new shoes as the
shoemaker was busy helping everyone else.... this poor processor to this
very day still has that fan on the back of the processor......
Ed# _www.smecc.org_ (http://www.smecc.org)
In a message dated 8/2/2016 9:42:19 A.M. US Mountain Standard Time,
glen.slick at gmail.com writes:
On Mon, Aug 1, 2016 at 10:25 PM, Lyle Bickley <lbickley at bickleywest.com>
wrote:
> On Mon, 1 Aug 2016 22:11:17 -0700
> Bob Rosenbloom <bobalan at sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>
> --snip--
>
>> There's a bunch of small electrolytic capacitors on the Inhibit
>> Driver Load Card, A106, that needed to be reformed before my memory
>> would work reliably.
>
>> They reformed themselves in one of my units. I had memory errors for
>> an hour or so then they went away. On other units, I reformed the
>> caps (took the board
>
>> out and slowly brought it up on a bench supply), and had no memory
>> errors at first power up of the system.
>>
>> Bob
>
> I had exactly the same problem with the capacitors on a spare Inhibit
> Driver Load Card. Most would not reform so I just replaced them with
> modern caps. The board (and memory) worked perfectly after that.
>
> Lyle
That is good information to know. I have a 2100A that I haven't
touched in a while. It had memory issues that I never got around to
trying to debug. Next time I work on it I'll look at the IDL card.
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