Issue 3b board
diode ID5 and cap C47 are missing from my board will these have any effect on system powering up.
I have checked the voltages on the 7508 and its good, the ram chips have +12, +5 and -5 but still strange blocks when start up I am now sure its a bad lower ram chip unless the above components could have something to do with it.
I have checked the voltages on the 7508 and its good, the ram chips have +12, +5 and -5 but still strange blocks when start up I am now sure its a bad lower ram chip unless the above components could have something to do with it.
Comments
Not sure which one you mean by "ID5"?
D5 is part of the keyboard circuit.
Mark
Repair Guides. Spanish Hardware site.
WoS - can't download? Info here...
former Meulie Spectrum Archive but no longer available :-(
Spectranet: the TNFS directory thread
! Standby alert !
“There are four lights!”
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb!
Looking forward to summer in Somerset later in the year :)
Mark
Repair Guides. Spanish Hardware site.
WoS - can't download? Info here...
former Meulie Spectrum Archive but no longer available :-(
Spectranet: the TNFS directory thread
! Standby alert !
“There are four lights!”
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb!
Looking forward to summer in Somerset later in the year :)
Mark
Repair Guides. Spanish Hardware site.
WoS - can't download? Info here...
former Meulie Spectrum Archive but no longer available :-(
Spectranet: the TNFS directory thread
! Standby alert !
“There are four lights!”
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb!
Looking forward to summer in Somerset later in the year :)
It may of course be a lower value, that will then pass more current, and so get hot...
Maybe post a picture...
Mark
Repair Guides. Spanish Hardware site.
WoS - can't download? Info here...
former Meulie Spectrum Archive but no longer available :-(
Spectranet: the TNFS directory thread
! Standby alert !
“There are four lights!”
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb!
Looking forward to summer in Somerset later in the year :)
The regulator output should be 5V.
So 12 - 5 = 7 volts across the resistor. 7V / 330 Ohms = 21.21mA
Power dissipated by the resistor is 7V x 21.21mA = 148mW. Most small wire ended resistors are 1/4W rated. So should have no trouble with this power level.
Mark
Repair Guides. Spanish Hardware site.
WoS - can't download? Info here...
former Meulie Spectrum Archive but no longer available :-(
Spectranet: the TNFS directory thread
! Standby alert !
“There are four lights!”
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb!
Looking forward to summer in Somerset later in the year :)
the resistor to the right is the one I am on about
:)
will I do any harm leaving it or removing it
Also, it may now read 330 ohms, but it may have started as a lower value.
The whole point of the 7805 and the attached heatsink is to correctly produce nice smooth noise and ripple free DC +5V supply. Adding a resistor like someone has done, is not really helping one bit.
Mark
Repair Guides. Spanish Hardware site.
WoS - can't download? Info here...
former Meulie Spectrum Archive but no longer available :-(
Spectranet: the TNFS directory thread
! Standby alert !
“There are four lights!”
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb!
Looking forward to summer in Somerset later in the year :)
Just be aware that parts of the circuit that form the switching regulator [for the +12V, the -5V and the "~12V" (a AC voltage)] have changed as Sinclair improved it. Your board may, or may not have been partly, or fully updated. So watch for this.
Mark
Repair Guides. Spanish Hardware site.
WoS - can't download? Info here...
former Meulie Spectrum Archive but no longer available :-(
Spectranet: the TNFS directory thread
! Standby alert !
“There are four lights!”
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb!
Looking forward to summer in Somerset later in the year :)
That exactly is my point "As far as I can see". You're still having to guess! Remove the burned resistor across the coil and that 100R one on the bottom too, then check again.
I have checked with the schematics and the mod on the top is part of there upgrade with the cap moved and diode removed
[quite=]Just be aware that parts of the circuit that form the switching regulator [for the +12V, the -5V and the "~12V" (a AC voltage)] have changed as Sinclair improved it. Your board may, or may not have been partly, or fully updated. So watch for this.
Mark[/quote]
when I remove the resistors under the board I will check all the voltages again to make sure they are correct and see why the have fitted the 100r on the bottom and boron the top as the components should be
-5v - -4.97v
+5v - +4.49v
+12v - +12.11v
+9v - +10.53
not sure if the +9v is 10 high.
I agree with Death, investigate the low +5V line. A 7805 is rated at 1A, but a normal 48k Spectrum typically uses around 530mA to 620mA on the +9V input (with no expansions connected). Note that there is a slight variation in this current depending on the board issue / the exact chips fitted. For example:
Issue 1 16k byte RAM uses 490mA
Unspecified 48k+ RAM uses 562mA (keyboard fault, but otherwise works okay, so in my repair pile)
Unspecified 48k+ RAM uses 603mA (keyboard fault, but otherwise works okay, so in my repair pile)
Issue 6A 48k+ RAM uses 537mA
Mark
Repair Guides. Spanish Hardware site.
WoS - can't download? Info here...
former Meulie Spectrum Archive but no longer available :-(
Spectranet: the TNFS directory thread
! Standby alert !
“There are four lights!”
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb!
Looking forward to summer in Somerset later in the year :)
4.95V is fine :-)
Repair Guides. Spanish Hardware site.
WoS - can't download? Info here...
former Meulie Spectrum Archive but no longer available :-(
Spectranet: the TNFS directory thread
! Standby alert !
“There are four lights!”
Step up to red alert. Sir, are you absolutely sure? It does mean changing the bulb!
Looking forward to summer in Somerset later in the year :)