First post, by bananaman
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I'm working with a self-contained data acquisition device built around a Pentium 3 board.
These are the voltage readings in the bios:
Processor (Expected) = 1.75vProcessor (Measured) = 1.76vBackup Supply = 2.82v+1.5v Supply = 1.46v+1.8v Supply = 1.80v+2.5v Supply = 2.48v+3.3v Supply = 3.18v+3.3v Standby = 3.13v+5v Supply = 4.98v+12v Supply = 12.04v-12v Supply = -10.89v
The readings for the -12 and +3.3 rails are technically within the general tolerances for the ATX specification...
but I work as a calibration tech in a metrology laboratory, and I am aware of the implications of things being "technically" acceptable and the uncertainty it can add to a measured system.
I guess my primary question is:
What is the -12v line used for? is it integral to the PCI bus or power architecture?
I'm aware that an older ISA-capable system has a -3.3v line that is used as a reference for some ISA devices, so I wondered if this negative 12v line in the ATX standard perhaps served a similar purpose.
these units can no longer be adjusted/calibrated by outside labs and are no longer serviced by the manufacturer.
They have slowly been drifting out of spec over the years and we have been limiting their use accordingly, but I tend to find myself breathing temporary life back into a lot of things that I put my hands on, so I was weighing whether it might be worthwhile to try and refresh part of the power supply to bring that -12v closer to its nominal value.
The 16 channel input card is just a giant logic board that gets its power, and is controlled, via PCI slot; when verifying with voltage and frequency standards, upper and lower values in certain ranges fall short toward the furthest ends of a range... ie: 20v scale is -10 to +10, and once you get to and beyond |8v| in either direction, the value may be ~7.8 instead of 8, ~9.7 instead of 10, etc.
I have seen multiple instances of assorted instrumentation failing to meet their own specs if they aren't receiving ideal supply/excitation, so I figured similar logic might apply in this instance... and it is effectively the only variable that I have control over since there's no physical adjustments available on the acquisition board, and no software calibration options available as an end-user.
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