Opening an oscillator can to determine cause of failure

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David Cook

Tinkerer
Jul 20, 2023
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The other day, I posted about repairing some Macintosh II motherboards.


Two of the 'dead' motherboards had bad 31.3344 MHz oscillators. I thought it would be interesting to open up the oscillators and try to determine the cause of failure.

I cut them open with a Dremel with a cut-off blade. Some damage and dust in the photos below was caused by this method.

Oscillator can open.jpg


Frankly, everything looks intact. The little cut and brown burn mark near the black blobs is a laser trimmed resistor. However, the SMD capacitor in the image below does not look securely bonded. This is conductive epoxy -- not solder. It doesn't look like they used enough of it or didn't press down on the SMD part.

Laser cut resistor and poor epoxy.jpg


Underneath the crystal is a semiconductor die with bond wires. I soldered and shaved in order to get readings of some of the components. So, ignore all that damage. Instead, take a look at the pads on the left and the right where I snapped off the arms that held the crystal. On the left, you can see that the conductive epoxy held to the pad. On the right, it came off cleanly.

Die-bonding-wires-poor-epoxy.jpg


Here's my failure theory. I think there was a manufacturing 'defect' in that they did not use enough epoxy or the epoxy was defective (old? not runny enough). It just didn't bond securely. With time, the epoxy degraded further and then I put it in an ultrasonic cleaner which vibrated everything. That was enough for at least one junction to become loose and no longer conduct adequately.

The use of conductive epoxy would explain why so many crystals and oscillators can be damaged in ultrasonic cleaners.

Here is a closer shot of the die.

Die.png


- David
 
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Garrett

Tinkerer
Oct 31, 2021
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South Carolina
This is so fascinating. I’ve never thought to open one of these up for inspection. I don’t think my ultrasonic cleaner has killed any oscillators, but I do recall dealing with one damaged due to battery corrosion. My mistake for trying to reuse it on an SE/30 reloaded board.

On a related note, I throughly enjoy reading your in depth troubleshooting, diagnostic, and exploration posts. It’s great information to have out there and I’m sure appreciated by many! I’ve got a backlog of repairs to work through, and I’m sure many of my systems will have similar faults as what you’ve seen.
 

David Cook

Tinkerer
Jul 20, 2023
172
229
43
On a related note, I throughly enjoy reading your in depth troubleshooting, diagnostic, and exploration posts. It’s great information to have out there and I’m sure appreciated by many!

Wow! Thank you very much. You've made my day.
 

David Cook

Tinkerer
Jul 20, 2023
172
229
43
FYI. On early Macintosh II motherboards, some engineer got overzealous with the ground loop. They connected pin 1 to pin 4/7 GND.

GND on enable pin.jpg


I assume early oscillators did not use pin 1. However, most of the oscillators I know use pin 1 for 'enable'. If it is grounded, it won't output. Therefore, if you are trying to replace a bad oscillator, the 'modern' replacement won't work with pin 1 grounded.

Furthermore, the engineer also connected these pins to the ground plane. So, you can't simply cut the trace leading to pin 1. Instead, you'll need to cut off the enable pin on the oscillator and place an insulator (Kapton tape?) between the oscillator and the PCB at pin 1. A floating pin is considered enabled on an oscillator.

Alternatively, you might be able to find an oscillator that does not have an output enable pin.

- David