VOGONS


My new 486-386 junk boards [IT gore]

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Reply 80 of 102, by Deksor

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Well uh I'm sorry but THIS is the pin that I want 😊

The attachment pin.jpg is no longer available

Also, I think I'm going to buy the chip that's missing from mine as, according to the datasheet, it seems to play an important role in the voltage regulation domain. But there seem to be many version of it, and I'm not sure which one should-I buy. And I don't know much in electronics further than "this capacitor is bad, replace it; this trace is dead, fix it; this resistor is missing, replace it; etc"

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Reply 81 of 102, by HerrSauce

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Good luck restoring those old mobos. 😜

You need to be on OS/2 and IBM LAN system.

Reply 82 of 102, by treeman

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ok, well that pin is covered then in my previous posts, the blue line has continuity to first and second solder points from the edge of the board which "chip" are you talking about?

Reply 84 of 102, by treeman

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oh yes I went back to page 1 and see you do not have it, this is strange. Do the pads have any sign of desoldering or its clean from factory? anyway I also don't know what the function of that chip is

Reply 85 of 102, by Deunan

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LP2951 is a voltage regulator. Chances are it was used to set the voltage for the power transistor in emitter-follower mode. It would be much more precise than doing it with a simple resistor divider like some mobos had.

Reply 86 of 102, by Deksor

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Oddly the pads look clean ...

There seem to be several versions of that chip though, and so I'm not sure which one I should get.

What I'm planning to do now is to reproduce the same voltage regulation circuit as you have, since mine, if it ever existed, have been heavily modified it seems.

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Reply 87 of 102, by treeman

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I was reading in the thread about solder pads that in factory sometimes they make room for few different resistor sizes and types incase supplier runs out of one. Maybye its the same with the voltage chip you are missing. They made the function in another way and part but the pads are there from factory.

I guess if the voltages inside the cpu socket are ok with the corresponding pins then its working?

Anyway here is a high res pic of my board as a reference, see what is missing or extra

IMG-20190430-105039.jpg

Reply 88 of 102, by Deksor

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Very cool 😁

Well the voltages in the CPU socket were NEVER right (except 5v 🤣). Now that I have removed the bridge and swapped the regulator, I can't change the voltage at all, it stays to 5V, so something else is wrong here.

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Reply 89 of 102, by HerrSauce

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oh shit

You need to be on OS/2 and IBM LAN system.

Reply 90 of 102, by Deksor

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Hey it's been a while !
I haven't done much recently, I'm waiting for DALLAS chips to arrive, and I should also order that missing resistor/chip for the ATC1415.

But today I was working on cleaning one of my working ISA I/O card because it's quite rusty and full of dirt (almost like the card had some mud on it or something like that) so I had to remove the parallel/game ports using the desoldering iron.

And since the iron was hot I thought "why not trying to desolder some 30 pin RAM slots from one of the donnor board ?" (I was kinda lazy to do that because that donnor board is actually quite resilient to "give" its components, or at least I thought it was because this time I had no real problem - maybe I'm just getting better at desoldering things with that desoldering iron ? - but also because it's a bit boring actually ^^). Anyways, so I successfully removed four 30 pin RAM slots from a dead 486 motherboard, and I brought them to the ABIT FU3 (the 386DX motherboard)

The attachment 8MB.jpg is no longer available

Tadaa !

The attachment new ram slots back.jpg is no longer available

It still looks nasty, but what can I do now ?

The attachment new ram slots front.jpg is no longer available

And here's the front

I chose to not remove the other four RAM slots from this board even though they look a bit rough : too much work for too little (they work very well and the board will always look rough even with new ram slots, plus it's not like they had oxydation that could become worse after a while)

So I think that board is now totally fixed 😁 It just needs some cleaning and then it'll be ready to find a new metal home

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Reply 91 of 102, by manuelink64

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I love this kind of threads! 😉
kudos for you!

[Unisys CWP] [CPU] AMD-X5-133ADZ [RAM] 64 MB (4x36) FPM [HDD] Seagate 8.4GB [Audio] SB16 SCSI 2 (CT1770) [Video] ATI Mach64VT2 [OS] Windows 95 OSR2.5

Reply 92 of 102, by Deksor

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Great, I've finally received my DALLAS chips 😁

So I've removed the old rusty chip from the ATC1415 and I emptied the holes (that was much tougher than I expected ! The oxydation was really annoying to deal with)

The attachment IMG_20190515_175239.jpg is no longer available

And now the new socket ^^

The attachment IMG_20190515_175752.jpg is no longer available

After a short test, it works flawlessly. Before that, just reseting the board was enough to lose the settings (I'm not even sure the old chip was really working to be honest. The previous owner tried to do something with it as I saw some flux on pins in a corner, but he stopped at some point).

Now let's order the CMS resistor and that missing chip.

Edit : So I ordered this one. Quite expensive and I only need one, but this seem to be exactly the same (same brand and etc, just 4 years newer)

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Reply 93 of 102, by treeman

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excellent work, good to see this board receiving some good care finally

Reply 94 of 102, by Deksor

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When the CPU voltage regulation will be fixed, I'll start to remove each expansion slot as they're ALL oxyded and I'll replace all of them ... That's going to be a fun moment x)
But this should let me make sure everything's fine underneath these.

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Reply 95 of 102, by Deksor

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Here we are again ! So I've received the resistor and the chip and I've soldered them on the board.

The attachment chip and resistor.jpg is no longer available

Not my proudest solder job, but it's good enough for the moment (and I've lost my flux pen 🙁). So +5V for the CPU is back, but I'm still not getting the correct voltages concerning the +3.3/+3.45/+4.0V settings. (I get 1.8/2.0-ish volts instead which isn't enough to run anything of course)

Now I start to suspect the capacitors (the previous owner has definitely done something with them since the solder on their legs isn't looking like proffesionally soldered). Could bad/wrongly sized caps prevent the voltages from being correct ? If so, can I have the original capacitors specs ? (I don't really trust those on my board, maybe they've been added by the previous owner).

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Reply 96 of 102, by treeman

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are you getting 1.8-2V at the vrm or the actual CPU socket?

on my board I always get crap readings on the vrm 1.5 ~ 1.8v but when measure in the actual socket its correct

Reply 98 of 102, by treeman

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I see, I don't know if thats right behaviour but on my atc1415 I was getting correct 5v and 3.4v in the socket without the cpu. I thought it was the set of the resistors near the voltage pins that regulate the voltage to the socket

If you tell me which ones I can read the values of my board for the resistors/electeolitic caps