H.W.Necromancer wrote on 2022-11-20, 08:03:
It make sence why the chip is socketed as those were prone to failure more then others (as far as other guys told me).
At that time, socketing expensive chips in PLCC case (like your 82c206) was common. One contributing factor was indeed that you can just swap the chip in case it failed, and don't have to replace the whole board (or do on-site rework if it failed at a customer's site). Another factor contributing to socketing PLCC chips is that you can manufacture the boards even before you have the PLCC chips in stock. As these chips are expensive, the sunk cost of boards in storage go down, and these chips can easily be added by lightly trained personnel at the time of packaging the board for shipping. In the 80286 days, boards were common with all chipset components being socketed. In case of your board, the major chipset components by UMC are no longer in PLCC case (easily socketable), but in QFP. QFP allows the pins to be closer than PLCC, allowing more pins per chip. Pin count was a serious design constraint those times. There are no cheap, easy to operate and reliable QFP sockets.
So I wouldn't infer that the board manufacturer considered the 82c206 likely to fail, just because that's the only socketed chipset component. The 82c206 is a proven "low frequency" chip (it is connected to the ISA bus at nominally 8MHz), whereas the UMC chips are newer and mostly run at FSB frequency (25MHz with some signals even at 50MHz). The UMC chips are very likely more delicate. Assuming the chance of getting a similar ESD spike is equally high for the C&T 82c206 and the UMC 82C38x chips, I would expect the UMC chips to be more susceptible to damage. It was just "how everyone did it" at that time to socket complicated DIP and PLCC chips, and not socket QFP chips.
In my experience, broken traces and correded contacts are more often a problem than broken chip, but I have to admit that my experience is more about slightly later boards, and things have changed over time. People fix C64 computers by replacing dead chips all around youtube. In case the 82c206 is actually bad, you should have no problem sourcing a replacement from ebay. It shouldn't matter whether you use the original Chips one or the SAB82c206 (manufactured by Siemens) that also comes up a lot. Most likely it's identical. Siemens did a lot of second-source production at that time. There also are 8088 and 8086 chips manufactured by Siemens.
H.W.Necromancer wrote on 2022-11-20, 08:03:
I have added the board to the TRW. It seems to be rare.
Thanks for that!