First post, by dylanfm
I'm trying to fix a Micronics (09-00065) 386DX motherboard like this one:
https://theretroweb.com/motherboards/s/micron … -386-25-09-0006
It has a lot of damage from a leaking battery. I removed the battery and cleaned up most of the corrosion. I have found some of the traces that were eaten away completely and soldered on bodge wires and also unsoldered a couple of chips and socketed a couple of chips, but I'm still having trouble finding the rest of the issues. When powered up, I get no beeps and no output from the VGA card I installed. I get only dashes on the POST test card I installed usually, but if I cycle the power quickly, sometimes it cycles through a bunch codes real fast, before stopping. I think it is just garbage and not actually trying to post, because when display is doing that, the FRAME light on the post card goes out and I still don't get any output on the display.
The RESET pin on the ISA bus is always high, except when the POST card goes crazy, then it has a glitchy looking low pulse sometimes. The 2 chips that I unsoldered were a MC14069 and a 74F04. I don't have replacements for those chips, and even though they test good on my chip tester, I suspect they are bad because the inputs and outputs of the gates on them look different on my cheap scope when they are installed vs when I install 74HC04's to replace them. I realize that 74HC04's aren't exactly the same, and I don't know if they are close enough to work or not, that is all I have right now. With the 74HC04's installed, most of the outputs of the gates have clean looking square waves which wasn't the case with the original chip. One of the outputs of the chip that was the MC14069 (closest to the edge of the board) that has a square wave on the output (gate 6, pin 12) is odd because its input looks to be floating. I'm not sure if having a signal on the output when there isn't an input is by design or indicates a short somewhere. I can't readily tell where the input to that gate is supposed to go.
So, does anybody happen to have schematics of this board or something similar? Or close-up, high-resolution pictures of the area around the power connector where the battery was? This one might just be beyond my current capabilities to repair.