Hello Rob. The power supply voltage might be a bit too high.
Early Spectrums expected a "9V" DC power supply. The DC/DC converter that makes +12V, +12VA, -5V and -12V(AC) in some early versions (up to Issue 3, IIRC) stops working if the input voltage is too high. Happened frequently around midnight here in Iceland when one had typed in (but not saved) a long program, because normal people then turned off their lights, and the mains voltage went a bit up :) Best regards Thor. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Rob Jarratt via cctalk" <[email protected]> To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts" <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, January 1, 2018 11:46:13 AM Subject: RE: ZX Spectrum Z80 Keeps Resetting Replying to my own mail to consolidate my answers to the two very kind responses I got. In answer to Adrian: Regarding the PSU, I actually have two Spectrums, the same PSU seems to power the other one OK. I quickly checked it and it is outputting 13.4V and there is no ripple to speak of. So I think the PSU is OK. In answer to Jon: I did look at the power rails. The output from the 7805 looks absolutely fine and the inputs to some of the ICs looks fine. However the Vcc input to the Z80 did look a bit noisy, I found there are quite a few spikes, their amplitude appears to be 600mV. I temporarily added a 3.5uF capacitor I happened to have lying around, this reduced the amplitude of the spikes to about 200mV, but didn't affect the behaviour. I am not sure if these spikes could cause the reset behaviour though. I suppose the spikes could mean either there is a faulty IC (finding that won't be easy), or there is a bad capacitor somewhere. I did replace most of the electrolytic ones, but not all of them, so that is probably a good line of inquiry. I don't think it will be a bad memory location/region in the ROM though because a lot of the resets occur in a loop, so it can read the locations, although I suppose it is possible that the logic levels on the address/data paths could be marginal and occasionally resulting in bad data. My next step was going to be to discover how to get my logic analyser to capture the addresses *and* the resulting data, but I think I will double check the capacitors first. Happy New Year! Rob
