Reply 3900 of 29597, by Ozzuneoj
- Rank
- l33t
I'm pumped... I bought a brand new looking Everex EV659 8bit EGA card with a parallel port, in its original box with all the packaging, booklet and QC card (no disk for some reason) on ebay for $16 shipped. I tried it in my IBM 5150 in place of the EV653 I have (no parallel port) and the system wouldn't turn on with it installed... the PSU fan would move slightly but I'd get no power at all.
I figured it was something electrical... a short somewhere... most likely a bad tantalum cap, since it hadn't had power through it in years. I read a thread online where someone had a similar card (EV659A) start shooting sparks out of a tantalum in a similar place to where my board had one. I'm no good with circuits and I can't read schematics, but I'm learning here and there... so my best guess was to just get out my DMM and test each tantalum cap for continuity. I know this isn't a guaranteed thing since they are in-circuit, but sure enough, the one that I had suspected was the only one that was shorted.
I dug through my bin of misc old electronic parts and managed to find a Rubycon electrolytic with a similar rating. Being that this part seems to be related to the (unused) feature connector, I wasn't too concerned about whether it'd perform exactly the way it was meant to with a tantalum... I just wanted to fix it! I busted out my trusty vacuum desoldering station and removed the part with ease. Tested it out of circuit with my DMM and it was still shorted! Woohoo!
I put the new (old) replacement cap in, soldered it, tested the card and it works perfectly! This is a great card. It has TONS of options for various display types. It allows me to have 16 color EGA graphics (other than 640x350 10h mode) on my IBM 5153 CGA monitor. My EV653 did as well, but for the price of the card in its box, I couldn't pass it up, and this one provides one more expansion option (parallel port) in an extremely port-limited system.
I couldn't be happier with this. Now I'm wondering if I should revisit my dead IBM Model F, because it had a few caps that showed as shorted in-circuit and I didn't think anything of it. I may have to try swapping them out, just in case.