MikeSG wrote on 2025-12-10, 13:12:Bad capacitors are possible. Check the 5V rail, if it's below ~4.8V it could mean worn capacitors, and spikes could dip below th […]
Show full quote
Bad capacitors are possible. Check the 5V rail, if it's below ~4.8V it could mean worn capacitors, and spikes could dip below the minimum voltage threshold for some chips. Changing the capacitors around the PSU connector on the motherboard can bring the voltage up, more than changing other capacitors.
Ontrack is more for modern drives, so Speedstor might be the application to use..
Going back to the max '15 sectors per track' of your current drive controller.... This page says the most common number was 17, and RLL potentially doubles that number when low-level formatted.
https://www.redhill.net.au/d/10.php
Does the MFM controller provide some format command?
I will take a look at the voltages this morning, I think it will be a tantalum thats failed.
Its going to be a bit of a nuisance getting to everything on this motherboard, its got so many things covering it, but when I first powered it on i did notice a bit of a smell but no smoke to be seen.
I looked through the manual for this disk controller and says to use IBM diagnostics to perform the low level format.
I think this controller is MFM only but others in this series do support RLL.
I have other controller cards here that have built in format programs on the ROM and can do RLL.
Do most older drives support RLL with no issues? I can check the model number when I get it out.
Edit.
I got the drives out, looks like they are very similar models from control data corporation.
The one that has issues spinning up had a chip taped to the back of it.
Looks like it plugs into the rear. Not sure why it was removed.
Has some post it notes stuck everywhere with something about removing a termination resistor if both drives are used.
Not too familiar with any of that. Also has some jumper diagrams.
See photos.
As far as voltages go, the motherboard power connector has a bunch of black wires that all go to ground, some yellow, white, blue, red and orange
All the yellow read 4.98v
Orange reads 4.63v
White is 5.13v
Blue is 12.27v
Red is 12.13v
Does this look normal?
The 5v rails seem ok anyhow, not sure about the others.
I can't see anything burnt out caps anywhere, im getting 4.98v and 12V across the ones near the power connector.
I measured a few of the yellow tantalum caps around the board and all those are 4.98v. I can't measure the ones that the power supply covers when fitted but I think they are ok
I also dusted the motherboard and was able to reseat all the chips.
I put it all back together and was able to get it to post but had no disk controller connected, I put that in and now nothing.
So I took it out and still nothing!
Going round in circles here, but intermittently i can get a single post beep but no image, or sometimes I will get 3 short beeps.
Possibly a memory error of some kind?
I had been getting the message CMOS RAM STAMP ERROR every time I switched it on but it still ran fine.
Im assuming this is due to no battery?
Still got to find a battery for this, its an unusually high voltage for a PC, this one is 6.8v