Hi all,
Really glad to have found this forum recently and specifically the Simasima Repair Guide posted here, much thanks for that!
I purchased this SE/30 around this same time last year and recapped every board in the unit, also removed UE10 and reinstalled it, fixing all of the broken traces.
UE10 is not pretty, but functional and no bridges. Has +5.05V at pin 35, Reset is working.
UE8 was also replaced. But I still get the Simasima pattern.
Took a break from this project because I was lost and didn't know how to fix this, then I found the Repair Guide here a couple of weeks ago. This gave me a push to pick this back up and try again.
Brief summary of all of the troubleshooting steps taken up until today:
Entire Recap of every board - PSU voltages are +12.66V, +5.05V, -11.77V
Remove, clean, and reinstall UE10 and UE8
Tone out every single Address and Data line from the CPU and PDS, to the ROM and Memory socket - took forever but all connections are there.
Removed all socketed ROM, GAL/PAL chips, DeOxit and clean the chip legs
Verify that UE10 ASC/DSC is connected and all of the traces are working according to the Address and Data line Matrix, pages 10-11 in the Redrawn Schematic
This brings me to where I'm at currently, the clock signals provided by the Simasima Repair Guide.
This is what was measured today:
I'm concerned with the C16G clocks not being exact and instead, matching the C16M clocks instead. The E clock is also under speed.
But C3M being under speed and also having this strange looking wave pattern has me wondering if this is causing any issues:
The Repair Guide doesn't mention what the problem could be, or what to do, in the case that my Clocks aren't exactly right.
Can anyone see what I'm doing wrong here? Or where I should look to fix the Clock issue I seem to be having.
I have a Reloaded SE/30 V5 board arriving today, in the case I'll need it - but this stock board really doesn't seem to be that bad.
Thanks again for this great site and the repair guide! Any help you can provide me going forward, I'll follow the directions to the letter and greatly appreciate it.
Really glad to have found this forum recently and specifically the Simasima Repair Guide posted here, much thanks for that!
I purchased this SE/30 around this same time last year and recapped every board in the unit, also removed UE10 and reinstalled it, fixing all of the broken traces.
UE10 is not pretty, but functional and no bridges. Has +5.05V at pin 35, Reset is working.
UE8 was also replaced. But I still get the Simasima pattern.
Took a break from this project because I was lost and didn't know how to fix this, then I found the Repair Guide here a couple of weeks ago. This gave me a push to pick this back up and try again.
Brief summary of all of the troubleshooting steps taken up until today:
Entire Recap of every board - PSU voltages are +12.66V, +5.05V, -11.77V
Remove, clean, and reinstall UE10 and UE8
Tone out every single Address and Data line from the CPU and PDS, to the ROM and Memory socket - took forever but all connections are there.
Removed all socketed ROM, GAL/PAL chips, DeOxit and clean the chip legs
Verify that UE10 ASC/DSC is connected and all of the traces are working according to the Address and Data line Matrix, pages 10-11 in the Redrawn Schematic
This brings me to where I'm at currently, the clock signals provided by the Simasima Repair Guide.
This is what was measured today:
I'm concerned with the C16G clocks not being exact and instead, matching the C16M clocks instead. The E clock is also under speed.
But C3M being under speed and also having this strange looking wave pattern has me wondering if this is causing any issues:
The Repair Guide doesn't mention what the problem could be, or what to do, in the case that my Clocks aren't exactly right.
Can anyone see what I'm doing wrong here? Or where I should look to fix the Clock issue I seem to be having.
I have a Reloaded SE/30 V5 board arriving today, in the case I'll need it - but this stock board really doesn't seem to be that bad.
Thanks again for this great site and the repair guide! Any help you can provide me going forward, I'll follow the directions to the letter and greatly appreciate it.