Hi Everyone, Jay West was kind enough to point me to this list and I just wanted to introduce myself before I start begging for help. :-)
I started out life coding on a CDC Cyber-170 and from there moved up through the TRS-80 model I before finally taking the plunge and purchasing a very early Apple ][+. After that, I moved up through the Apple //e and finally landed in the 32-bit world with my Amiga 1000. I had an Amiga 2000 and then finally sold out and lived in the WinTel world until being "rescued" by a PPC32 Mac Mini. From there it's been Mac mostly but I've always loved older, less mainstream gear. When I rediscovered OpenBSD and the fact that it has some of these "distaff" architectures as full tier-1 citizens, I started playing around. At this point I have that same MacMini (macppc), a Sun Blade 100 (sparc64), an Alphastation 500/400 (alpha), an SGI O2 (mips64), an HP C3700 (hppa) and a VAXstation 3100 (VAX). Everything except the VAX is running 5.9-current on OpenBSD and doing surprisingly well. I'm trying to bring the VAXstation back to life (picked it up on eBay for less than $30 US) and I'm having a problem (here's where I start begging for help). The diagnostic LEDs on the back (thanks to http://home.claranet.nl/users/pb0aia/vax/3100leds.html for helping me decode them) finally settle at: 1000 1010 Which I'm reading as a failed self-test in the "MM" subsystem. I'm assuming MM=Memory Management Unit. I have also noticed it never spins up the hard drive (that's a working drive I personally installed so I know it's good) or tries to access the floppy. On the advice of some of the folks on the list, I stripped the machine down to the bare board (man there was a lot of dust in there). I found (as I expected to) that the CMOS battery had leaked but there wasn't a lot of corrosion on the board near the connector and the solder pads in that area looked particularly beefy so I don't think I have any board or trace damage from that. When I powered the box up with everything removed, I got the same MM subsystem failure error so I don't think it's the memory board. I'm still waiting on my final cable to be able to get on the serial console so I can't run TEST 50 yet but I'm hoping someone on here can point me in another diagnostic direction. Or, does a failed "MM" test mean the CPU or main board are done with and I need to replace it? Many thanks in advance for any help you can give me. Thanks, Bryan
