Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-24 Thread Local52Mixer
Hi all,
 
Question to the group...not a vintage computer problem.  A problem  with a 
much newer system.  An Acer Aspire desktop about 10 years old.   I'm trying 
to sell it and reset windows (vista) to factory original.  It  locked up'd 
during that process and I reset it.  Seems the BIOS is now  corrupted.  I 
need to re-flash the BIOS and to do that I need a bootable CD  disk.
 
I have tried several times to format a brand new disk and make it a boot  
disk.  Problem is the format option under Windows 8 doesn't allow me to  
click that make boot disk option.  Any ideas on how to create a boot  disk for 
a 
windows vista system?  Once I have the boot disk, it's a simple  matter to 
copy the BIOS files to that disk and re-flash the system.   Once it is 
started again, I can see what's up with the original Vista or whether  i need 
to 
do a full re-load.
 
I would like any ideas anyone has to offer.  I have lots of computer  gear 
and need to cull the heard, too much space and I'm moving soon.  I  hate 
to see a buyer slip away.
 
You can email me directly at _local52mixer@aol.com_ 
(mailto:local52mi...@aol.com)  _or_ (mailto:local52mixer@or)  call my 
cell...732-530-1924.
 
Thanks in advance,
BD
 
 
In a message dated 7/24/2015 1:18:09 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
tothw...@concentric.net writes:

On Wed,  22 Jul 2015, Chuck Guzis wrote:
 On 07/22/2015 10:09 PM, Tothwolf  wrote:

 One example I can give are some Pentium P55C  architecture (Socket 7) 
 systems which I've been running with  minimal downtime for ~15 years. 
 The original power supplies with  their original (and relatively low 
 quality) capacitors lasted  about 15 to 17 years (I think the 
 manufacture date code stamped  on the oldest one was 1998) before the 
 systems began to develop  stability issues, requiring me to rebuild the 
 power supplies with  new capacitors. I fully expect that the 
 replacements would last  even longer than 20 years, however I rather 
 doubt I'll be running  those computers by then.

 Does anyone have much experience with  the so-called solid electrolyte 
 electrolytics?  Fvor replacing  vintage caps, they're probably not a 
 viable choice as they're mostly  SMT, but just wondering...

I believe there are a few webpages out there  written by people who have 
tried it. From what I remember reading about  them years ago, they had no 
success when they tried to use them as  replacements in switch mode power 
supplies (no surprise, since the solid  polymer parts they attempted to use 
had way to low of ripple current  rating for that application) but had 
better results with certain PC  motherboards.

I use solid polymers as replacements in some  applications, and as they 
continue to decrease in cost, I've been  considering using them more for 
replacement of aging SMD aluminum  electrolytics. One application where I 
particularly like solid polymers is  for replacement of the vcore regulator 
filter capacitors on Pentium 4  industrial single board computers (yes, the 
P4 is still /widely/ used and  extremely common in that market, although it 
is slowly being replaced by  the Core Duo). The original aluminum 
electrolytics in that application are  usually 6.3V rated parts while the 
solid polymer replacements are 2.5V or  4V (vcore is under 2V).

In addition to long term stability, another  major benefit to solid 
polymers is that unlike aluminum electrolytics and  solid tantalums, solid 
aluminum polymers they can be used at their full  rated voltage with no ill 
effects. The only real downside that I know of  for a solid polymer is that 
they have an incredibly low ESR (less than  0.01 ohm), which can actually 
upset older circuit designs which were not  designed for capacitors with 
such a low  ESR.



Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-23 Thread Eric Smith
I wrote:
 I proposed it, and was willing to build microcontroller-based boards
 and write firmware, but IIRC it was decided that there was too little
 benefit.

On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 12:00 PM, William Donzelli wdonze...@gmail.com wrote:
 That seems odd, considering the lengths you guys took on the caps, and
 the whole museum mentality of keeping things safe for the artifacts.

There's no artifact safety issue for the PDP-1 power supplies.  They
use a ferroresonant transformer, rectifiers, and filter capacitors.
If any of those fail, the machine won't work properly, but it won't be
damaged.

If there had been voltage regulators, the failure of which could have
resulted in serious overvoltage, we probably would have added crowbar
circuits.

In the Type 30 display, it's possible, though rather unlikely, for a
failure in the deflection power supply to blow the deflection drive
transistors. Adding a microcontroller isn't likely to avoid that. A
crowbar circuit might be useful, though the damage happens so quickly
that the deflection transistors might still fail.


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-23 Thread Tothwolf

On Wed, 22 Jul 2015, Chuck Guzis wrote:

On 07/22/2015 10:09 PM, Tothwolf wrote:

One example I can give are some Pentium P55C architecture (Socket 7) 
systems which I've been running with minimal downtime for ~15 years. 
The original power supplies with their original (and relatively low 
quality) capacitors lasted about 15 to 17 years (I think the 
manufacture date code stamped on the oldest one was 1998) before the 
systems began to develop stability issues, requiring me to rebuild the 
power supplies with new capacitors. I fully expect that the 
replacements would last even longer than 20 years, however I rather 
doubt I'll be running those computers by then.


Does anyone have much experience with the so-called solid electrolyte 
electrolytics?  Fvor replacing vintage caps, they're probably not a 
viable choice as they're mostly SMT, but just wondering...


I believe there are a few webpages out there written by people who have 
tried it. From what I remember reading about them years ago, they had no 
success when they tried to use them as replacements in switch mode power 
supplies (no surprise, since the solid polymer parts they attempted to use 
had way to low of ripple current rating for that application) but had 
better results with certain PC motherboards.


I use solid polymers as replacements in some applications, and as they 
continue to decrease in cost, I've been considering using them more for 
replacement of aging SMD aluminum electrolytics. One application where I 
particularly like solid polymers is for replacement of the vcore regulator 
filter capacitors on Pentium 4 industrial single board computers (yes, the 
P4 is still /widely/ used and extremely common in that market, although it 
is slowly being replaced by the Core Duo). The original aluminum 
electrolytics in that application are usually 6.3V rated parts while the 
solid polymer replacements are 2.5V or 4V (vcore is under 2V).


In addition to long term stability, another major benefit to solid 
polymers is that unlike aluminum electrolytics and solid tantalums, solid 
aluminum polymers they can be used at their full rated voltage with no ill 
effects. The only real downside that I know of for a solid polymer is that 
they have an incredibly low ESR (less than 0.01 ohm), which can actually 
upset older circuit designs which were not designed for capacitors with 
such a low ESR.


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-23 Thread Noel Chiappa
 From: Lyle Bickley 

 we tested each capacitor for capacitance and ESR
  ...
 Each power supply had to meet it's specifications .. (every test was
 logged and documented).
 ...
 Every year we do a complete DEC specified preventative maintenance on
 the PDP-1 which includes testing every power supply for voltage,
 stability and ripple. 

When you tested the caps, did you all write down all the results? (I see you
logged the power supply results, so I'm guessing you all likely did for the
caps too, but you didn't say explicitly.) You all haven't by any chance gone
back and re-measured any of those caps, have you? (Again, standard PM likely
doesn't include measuring individual components - although if you're not
seeing any drift in the results, that's likely a sign that the components
aren't 'evolving'.)

If so, that would be really informative data about the longevity of these
particular electrolytics.

I say these particular because I'm starting to suspect that different
electrolytics behave differently - likely because of fine details of internal
construction, chemistry, etc. And it might even be details that the
manufacturers were not aware of.

I am reminded of a story (which I don't have time to chase down, to make sure
I have the details right) from the SR-71, or maybe it was some NASA gear.
Things all of a sudden started to fail in a way they had not before; after a
great deal of investigation, it turned out something really minor had changed
in the water supply to the manufacturing facility (perhaps they had started
doing municipal fluoridation, I think).

Noel


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-23 Thread William Donzelli
 As Eric, I'm a member of the PDP-1 Restoration Team. The PDP-1 restoration 
 was completed in 2005 - and annually we check the power supplies for voltage, 
 ripple, etc. Not one of the re-formed capacitors have failed in the ten years 
 since the completion of the restoration.

Did the team ever consider some sort of active monitoring of the
power, beyond whatever DEC implemented?
The big, chunky power supplies from the 1960s and 70s have the
advantage that you can very often make completely reversible changes
to the circuitry quite easily, due to all the screw terminals and the
like - adding current and voltage sense points, crowbars, and other
gizmos that just might save a transformer or two. And with today's
technology, those gizmos could be very small and tucked away.

--
Will


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-23 Thread ben

On 7/23/2015 12:06 AM, William Donzelli wrote:

As Eric, I'm a member of the PDP-1 Restoration Team. The PDP-1 restoration was 
completed in 2005 - and annually we check the power supplies for voltage, 
ripple, etc. Not one of the re-formed capacitors have failed in the ten years 
since the completion of the restoration.


Did the team ever consider some sort of active monitoring of the
power, beyond whatever DEC implemented?
The big, chunky power supplies from the 1960s and 70s have the
advantage that you can very often make completely reversible changes
to the circuitry quite easily, due to all the screw terminals and the
like - adding current and voltage sense points, crowbars, and other
gizmos that just might save a transformer or two. And with today's
technology, those gizmos could be very small and tucked away.


I think that is their choice not ours.


--
Will

Ben.





Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-23 Thread Eric Smith
On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 12:06 AM, William Donzelli wdonze...@gmail.com wrote:
 Did the team ever consider some sort of active monitoring of the
 power, beyond whatever DEC implemented?

I proposed it, and was willing to build microcontroller-based boards
and write firmware, but IIRC it was decided that there was too little
benefit.


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread Tothwolf

On Wed, 22 Jul 2015, tony duell wrote:

On Wed, 22 Jul 2015, Noel Chiappa wrote:

I am way out of my knowledge range in this discussion, but here's 
something I wanted to ask about: how do you reconcile this observation 
(assertion?) with the observations from several people (e.g. the PDP-1 
people) that they _have_ measured the electrolytics in their power 
supplies, and despite being N decades old (where N ~= 5), they are 
_still_ within specs? If the very nature of electrolytics mandates that 
they degrade, how are these still meeting specs?


Well, at least 2 possibilities...

Firstly, the tolerance of the capacitance of an electrolytic capacitor 
is very wide -- -20% to +80% is not uncommon. So it's quite possible 
they started off at the top end of that range, have deteriorated over 
the years, and are still within spec. Of course nobody can prove that 
(unless there are records of the values meaured 50 years ago) and nobody 
really knows how they will continue to change (if indeed they do).


Secondly, I have no idea what was measured. The capacitance value is not 
the whole story by any means. In fact the most important thing most of 
the time is ESR (Effective Series Resistance) which increases as the 
electrolyte dries up. The ESR of these components could well still be OK 
after 50 years, but again nobody knows what it was when they were new.


That said, I keep on with the comment that the important thing is 'does 
the circuit behave as required', If so, then the capacitor is almost by 
definition OK in that circuit.


From what I remember from an earlier discussion about that PDP-1, after 
reforming, those large capacitors were leak tested at or slightly above 
their rated voltage.


As for meeting spec, unless DEC documented what their original design 
criteria was, there really is no way to know with 100% certainty. The only 
thing we could know today is if the capacitor passes industry standard 
tests and if the power supply those capacitors are a part of functions 
correctly when fully loaded.


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread Tothwolf

On Wed, 22 Jul 2015, tony duell wrote:

I think he did answer it. If the unit is operating correctly then the 
capacitors must be sufficiently good at that time for that unit.


Now, whether they will go on working is something that is very hard to 
tell. But that applies to every other component in the unit. An IC might 
work find now and suffer bond-out wire failure later on the same day.


Going purely from the historical data, failures of most semiconductors are 
/far/ less frequent than an aluminum electrolytic capacitor (except for a 
handful of certain TTL logic, which has been discussed previously here on 
classiccmp and elsewhere).


Just like the NiCd and SLA batteries I mentioned, aluminum electrolytic 
capacitors by their very electrochemical nature degrade as they age and 
as they are used. You cannot claim that a 20-30 year aluminum 
electrolytic


Semiconductors also degrade both with time and use. I would think a 
30-year-old 3 terminal regulator IC was also beyond its design life. So 
do you replace those 'anyway'? The damage done if one those fails is 
likely to greatly exceed the damage done if a capacitor fails.


Honestly, I've not seen all that many failed 3-terminal voltage regulators 
in the field. I've seen some which failed due to insufficient cooling or a 
loose heatsink, or with a hole blown in them after being hit with 24V AC, 
but not any that have failed short under normal use.


Do you replace all EPROMs in case they develop bit-rot (They are most 
likely way beyond their design life by now)?


I think like most of us on this list, anything I have which is mission 
critical gets backed up and can easily be reprogrammed if it fails. Most 
of the problems I've seen with bit-rot of EPROMs have been cases where 
their quartz windows were not originally covered. I use opaque foil 
stickers (I can see if I can find the part number for the stickers I use 
if anyone needs it) on any UV erasable memories I program and I haven't 
had issues with corrupt data.


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread Michael Thompson

 Date: Mon, 20 Jul 2015 14:11:46 +
 From: tony duell a...@p850ug1.demon.co.uk
 Subject: RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved
 
  Replace - yes, *especially* if you don't have a big budget. Aluminum
  electrolytic capacitors are CHEAP and easy to obtain. Replacement
  semiconductors by comparison are expensive and can be quite difficult to
  find.


The RICM ignored the sage advice from experts and reformed the
electrolytics in the PDP-12 that we are currently working on. This decision
was based on our past experience on other restorations, the lack of
replacements in the same physical size, and the very high cost of the
replacements. So far the system is behaving nicely.

We have had several spectacular failures of the AC caps with the
ferroresonant circuit in DEC power supplies. We regularly replace the AC
caps because they are available and inexpensive.

-- 
Michael Thompson


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread jwsmobile
Tail and signaling lights put much more stress on the filament.  The 
headlights are burned steady in practice and will burn out when they 
burn out.


I never replace both, and seldom see any correlation.  I just put the 
spare in the trunk with the kit to get at the lights when they do fail.  
I figure selling them in pairs makes sense to the marketers since they 
have seen demand replace both.  But I don't mind having them burn out 
before replacement.


Safety would dictate never having to operate the vehicle with failed 
signals, so it can be justified, I suppose to replace both to minimize 
that, but there is no way to justify regular replacement of bulbs just 
because they may fail.


To the original discussion, if disassembling and accessing the bulbs is 
a pain in the ass, as it is for most  systems, making sure all lamps are 
in good condition when the panel is uninstalled (which puts stress on 
the connectors, fasteners) by checking and replacing any which don't 
appear to be in good condition makes sense.


Jim

On 7/22/2015 8:00 AM, Al Kossow wrote:



On 7/22/15 7:43 AM, Tothwolf wrote:


I can't say I've previously heard of that being done with automotive 
bulbs

Then why are tail light bulbs sold in pairs?

I just had one go, and replaced both sides.







RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread Tothwolf

On Wed, 22 Jul 2015, tony duell wrote:

Given that a typical aluminum electrolytic capacitor costs anywhere 
from $0.12-$0.15 (4mm or 5mm diameter radials) to about $1.00 (12mm or 
16mm diameter radial), it also doesn't make much sense to desolder a 20 
year old part, spend at a minimum 5 or more minutes testing it, and 
then solder it back in. It it much more economical to pull the old part 
and install a new one and be done with it. (You also don't have to 
worry if the desoldering and resoldering process might have damaged the 
original parts end-seals.) That said, I personally pre-test new parts, 
in bulk, before I


I don't remove parts unless they have something to do with the problem I 
am solving. If the power rails are the right voltage with sufficiently 
low ripple then I look elsewhere for probkems.


put them into my stock, so I know ahead of time that I'm installing 
known-good parts.


You claim that electrolytics deteriorate with time whether used or not. 
How do you know the ones you install haven't deteriorated since you 
tested them?


When I pull capacitors from a board, I put them into numbered trays for 
testing. Each new part also gets another quick test before installation 
and the results of both get entered into a spreadsheet (along with date 
codes, part numbers, and any other data I have on hand). I did this 
initially for mission critical boards so I could provide the data to 
customers who needed that level of detail, but I later started doing this 
for all repairs because I found it wasn't all that difficult to do once I 
already had a system in place. When I'm testing old parts, I also note 
things like leaky seals, corrosion around the terminals, etc. Because of 
the historical data I've collected, I can also tell from my notes that 
there are definitely certain brand/series (both vintage and modern) which 
have common issues.


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread tony duell

  that are running perfectly just in case...
 
 How do you -know- they are running perfectly? Just because a widget
 itself is functioning, you have no way of knowing if that capacitor is
 working 100% properly /unless/ you actually remove it from circuit and run
 a full battery of tests on it. Simply measuring the capacitance with a DMM
 while a capacitor is in circuit isn't good enough.

I am reminded of something that was written either in the manual for my 'scope
or in Tekscope (I forget which). Namely that 'The best tube tester is the 
circuit
that uses the tube'. Tektronix deprecated the use of tube/valve testers for 
finding
faults in their instruments

It applies to capacitors too.

If the _circuit_ (power supply or whatever) works correcty the the capacitor is 
good 
enough for that circuit. Whether or not it meets some published specs or not.

 Given that a typical aluminum electrolytic capacitor costs anywhere from
 $0.12-$0.15 (4mm or 5mm diameter radials) to about $1.00 (12mm or 16mm
 diameter radial), it also doesn't make much sense to desolder a 20 year
 old part, spend at a minimum 5 or more minutes testing it, and then solder
 it back in. It it much more economical to pull the old part and install a
 new one and be done with it. (You also don't have to worry if the
 desoldering and resoldering process might have damaged the original parts
 end-seals.) That said, I personally pre-test new parts, in bulk, before I

I don't remove parts unless they have something to do with the problem I am
solving. If the power rails are the right voltage with sufficiently low ripple 
then
I look elsewhere for probkems.

 put them into my stock, so I know ahead of time that I'm installing
 known-good parts.

You claim that electrolytics deteriorate with time whether used or not. How 
do you know the ones you install haven't deteriorated since you tested them?

 On many occasions I've cut open old aluminum electrolytics, and the guts
 very much do deteriorate with age. In addition to corrosion of the foil
 (black spots and pitting) and foil to terminal junctions (corrosion), one
 thing I particularly noticed was the more operating hours an aluminum
 electrolytic capacitor had on it, the more its electrolyte and paper
 insulator tended to smell bad compared to an otherwise identical (same
 brand and series) part that had very low hours. These are all clear signs
 of deterioration.

Firstly the paper is not the insulator. After all, it is soaked in electrolyte. 
And
'smell bad'??? OK, so some chemical change has taken place, but how do you
know it is detrimental to the performance of the capacitor?

-tony


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread tony duell
 
 I might think twice about doing a board that was fragile with age, but
 otherwise, change 'em all.  Like replacing both headlight bulbs if one
 goes out--it's just a matter of time before the other one goes.

Do you seriously replace both headlight bulbs when one fails? I know of 
nobody who does that. Generally you carry a spare bulb kit and a screwdriver
and if a bulb fails, pull over and change it. 

Why not change all other bulbs on the car at the same time? Or change them
all once a year as part of the service [1]? What about bulbs in your house?

[1] OK, this is done for things like lighthouse bulbs which are replaced after 
so
many hours of operation, but that is a rather different case.

-tony


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread tony duell

  They reliably do what they're supposed to do.
 
 You didn't answer the question. How do you know those aluminum
 electrolytic capacitors are functioning just as good as they did when they
 were new? Unless you've tested them out of circuit, you simply cannot make

That, actually, is the wrong question to ask. You should ask 'How do you
know if these old capacitors are working as well as the brand-new replacements
will'. 

 that assertion.

I think he did answer it. If the unit is operating correctly then the 
capacitors must be
sufficiently good at that time for that unit.

Now, whether they will go on working is something that is very hard to tell. 
But that applies
to every other component in the unit. An IC might work find now and suffer 
bond-out wire
failure later on the same day.

 Just like the NiCd and SLA batteries I mentioned, aluminum electrolytic
 capacitors by their very electrochemical nature degrade as they age and as
 they are used. You cannot claim that a 20-30 year aluminum electrolytic

Semiconductors also degrade both with time and use. I would think a 30-year-old
3 terminal regulator IC was also beyond its design life. So do you replace 
those 
'anyway'? The damage done if one those fails is likely to greatly exceed the 
damage
done if a capacitor fails.

Do you replace all EPROMs in case they develop bit-rot (They are most likely way
beyond their design life by now)?

-tony


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread Noel Chiappa
 From: Tothwolf

 How do you know those aluminum electrolytic capacitors are functioning
 just as good as they did when they were new? Unless you've tested them
 out of circuit ...
 ... aluminum electrolytic capacitors by their very electrochemical
 nature degrade as they age and as they are used.

I am way out of my knowledge range in this discussion, but here's something I
wanted to ask about: how do you reconcile this observation (assertion?) with
the observations from several people (e.g. the PDP-1 people) that they _have_
measured the electrolytics in their power supplies, and despite being N
decades old (where N ~= 5), they are _still_ within specs? If the very nature
of electrolytics mandates that they degrade, how are these still meeting
specs?

I'm very confused...

Noel


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread william degnan
really good caps are better than specs and thus deteriorate into
specs over time, but all fade eventually.  Some may have connectors
that die before the cap inside.  Rarely does a cap actually measure
the same exactly as what is printed on the label.   The ESR value vs.
the capacity is the factor, and you can really get into is this a
good cap? world depending on what equipment you're using.  Personally
I have learned a lot about the subject in the past 5 years, you learn
some caps are more important than others, and how in spec they are
can be less important depending on the job being done.

On Wed, Jul 22, 2015 at 9:01 AM, Noel Chiappa j...@mercury.lcs.mit.edu wrote:
  From: Tothwolf

  How do you know those aluminum electrolytic capacitors are functioning
  just as good as they did when they were new? Unless you've tested them
  out of circuit ...
  ... aluminum electrolytic capacitors by their very electrochemical
  nature degrade as they age and as they are used.

 I am way out of my knowledge range in this discussion, but here's something I
 wanted to ask about: how do you reconcile this observation (assertion?) with
 the observations from several people (e.g. the PDP-1 people) that they _have_
 measured the electrolytics in their power supplies, and despite being N
 decades old (where N ~= 5), they are _still_ within specs? If the very nature
 of electrolytics mandates that they degrade, how are these still meeting
 specs?

 I'm very confused...

 Noel



-- 
Bill
vintagecomputer.net


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread tony duell
 
 From: Tothwolf

 How do you know those aluminum electrolytic capacitors are functioning
 just as good as they did when they were new? Unless you've tested them
 out of circuit ...
  ... aluminum electrolytic capacitors by their very electrochemical
  nature degrade as they age and as they are used.
 
 I am way out of my knowledge range in this discussion, but here's something I
 wanted to ask about: how do you reconcile this observation (assertion?) with
 the observations from several people (e.g. the PDP-1 people) that they _have_
 measured the electrolytics in their power supplies, and despite being N
 decades old (where N ~= 5), they are _still_ within specs? If the very nature
 of electrolytics mandates that they degrade, how are these still meeting
 specs?

Well, at least 2 possibilities...

Firstly, the tolerance of the capacitance of an electrolytic capacitor is very 
wide --
-20% to +80% is not uncommon. So it's quite possible they started off at the top
end of that range, have deteriorated over the years, and are still within spec. 
Of
course nobody can prove that (unless there are records of the values meaured
50 years ago) and nobody really knows how they will continue to change (if 
indeed
they do).

Secondly, I have no idea what was measured. The capacitance value is not the 
whole story by any means. In fact the most important thing most of the time is
ESR (Effective Series Resistance) which increases as the electrolyte dries up. 
The ESR of these components could well still be OK after 50 years, but again
nobody knows what it was when they were new.

That said, I keep on with the comment that the important thing is 'does the
circuit behave as required', If so, then the capacitor is almost by definition
OK in that circuit.

-tony



I'm very confused...

Noel


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread tony duell

  Do you seriously replace both headlight bulbs when one fails? I know of
  nobody who does that. Generally you carry a spare bulb kit and a screwdriver
  and if a bulb fails, pull over and change it.

 and - like the capacitor replacement question this is an it depends.
 For some cars - including the Mercedes A-class (at least earlier models) - it 
 is
 almost impossible to change the headlight bulb when the car is at ground level
 because it is accessed through a hatch in the wheel arch, whereas if the car

ARGH!!!

But presumably you carry a jack and tools to change a wheel. Can you not just 
remove the wheel on the correct side to reach the hatch (not that I want to work
on a car not supported on proper axle stands...)

Having had a number of bulbs that failed shortly (but not very shortly) after
installation (nothing to do with headlamps, and not quartz-halogen bulbs so
it was not contamination of the envelope that was the problem) I wonder if 
necessarily changing a good bulb is a good idea...

 is up on the garage lift with the wheel removed it is trivial. In that case 
 it is
 probably best to change both bulbs when one fails.

Why not just change them both as part of the 12000 mile service (or whatever)?

I am sure I once heard of a regulation that car bulbs (at least the legally 
required ones)
had to be changeable at the roadside with a minimum of tools. Looks like that 
is 
universally ignored

-tony


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread ANDY HOLT

From: tony duell a...@p850ug1.demon.co.uk
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts cctalk@classiccmp.org
Sent: Wednesday, 22 July, 2015 12:39:42 PM
Subject: RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

 
 I might think twice about doing a board that was fragile with age, but
 otherwise, change 'em all.  Like replacing both headlight bulbs if one
 goes out--it's just a matter of time before the other one goes.

Do you seriously replace both headlight bulbs when one fails? I know of 
nobody who does that. Generally you carry a spare bulb kit and a screwdriver
and if a bulb fails, pull over and change it. 


and - like the capacitor replacement question this is an it depends.
For some cars - including the Mercedes A-class (at least earlier models) - it is
almost impossible to change the headlight bulb when the car is at ground level
because it is accessed through a hatch in the wheel arch, whereas if the car
is up on the garage lift with the wheel removed it is trivial. In that case it 
is
probably best to change both bulbs when one fails. 
For capacitors (to get back OT) I'd be inclined to take one failure 
as happenstance whereas a second one as beginning to show a pattern.

Andy


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread Eric Smith
On Wed, Jul 22, 2015 at 9:33 AM, Tothwolf tothw...@concentric.net wrote:
 The only
 thing we could know today is if the capacitor passes industry standard tests
 and if the power supply those capacitors are a part of functions correctly
 when fully loaded.

We built a dummy load for testing the DEC Type 728 power supplies
under four different load conditions (combinations of loads on the two
outputs), and verified that the ripple was within DEC specifications.
The power supplies are retested for voltage and ripple every year.  If
the ESR increased very much, it would result in a noticable increase
in ripple.

Here's an example of the test results which are kept on file:

http://www.computerhistory.org/collections/catalog/102663945

The majority of the DC supplies in the PDP-1 are Type 728, but there
are a few other types as well, and they were and are tested also.


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread Chuck Guzis

On 07/22/2015 10:09 PM, Tothwolf wrote:


One example I can give are some Pentium P55C architecture (Socket 7)
systems which I've been running with minimal downtime for ~15 years. The
original power supplies with their original (and relatively low quality)
capacitors lasted about 15 to 17 years (I think the manufacture date
code stamped on the oldest one was 1998) before the systems began to
develop stability issues, requiring me to rebuild the power supplies
with new capacitors. I fully expect that the replacements would last
even longer than 20 years, however I rather doubt I'll be running those
computers by then.


Does anyone have much experience with the so-called solid electrolyte 
electrolytics?  Fvor replacing vintage caps, they're probably not a 
viable choice as they're mostly SMT, but just wondering...


--Chuck




RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread Tothwolf

On Wed, 22 Jul 2015, tony duell wrote:

On Wed, 22 Jul 2015, ANDY HOLT wrote:


Do you seriously replace both headlight bulbs when one fails? I know of
nobody who does that. Generally you carry a spare bulb kit and a screwdriver
and if a bulb fails, pull over and change it.


and - like the capacitor replacement question this is an it depends. 
For some cars - including the Mercedes A-class (at least earlier 
models) - it is almost impossible to change the headlight bulb when the 
car is at ground level because it is accessed through a hatch in the 
wheel arch, whereas if the car


ARGH!!!

But presumably you carry a jack and tools to change a wheel. Can you not 
just remove the wheel on the correct side to reach the hatch (not that I 
want to work on a car not supported on proper axle stands...)


Having had a number of bulbs that failed shortly (but not very shortly) 
after installation (nothing to do with headlamps, and not quartz-halogen 
bulbs so it was not contamination of the envelope that was the problem) 
I wonder if necessarily changing a good bulb is a good idea...


I can't say I've previously heard of that being done with automotive 
bulbs, but I do know that some pinball guys who do this. After a couple of 
lamps go out, they will replace them all at the same time because it 
usually isn't easy to change them, and once the lamps reach a certain 
number of power on hours, they start failing more and more frequently.


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread Al Kossow



On 7/22/15 7:43 AM, Tothwolf wrote:


I can't say I've previously heard of that being done with automotive bulbs

Then why are tail light bulbs sold in pairs?

I just had one go, and replaced both sides.




Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-22 Thread william degnan
This thread has gone on for a while and I think we all get the points
here, but one other consideration - how will removing and replacing a
component damage the board?  Damage the board and it's game over.  One
should always take the overall board's ability to handle replacement.
With the board in mind, I avoid any part replacements and try to keep
them to what is proven necessary only.

On Wed, Jul 22, 2015 at 8:18 AM, tony duell a...@p850ug1.demon.co.uk wrote:

  They reliably do what they're supposed to do.

 You didn't answer the question. How do you know those aluminum
 electrolytic capacitors are functioning just as good as they did when they
 were new? Unless you've tested them out of circuit, you simply cannot make

 That, actually, is the wrong question to ask. You should ask 'How do you
 know if these old capacitors are working as well as the brand-new replacements
 will'.

 that assertion.

 I think he did answer it. If the unit is operating correctly then the 
 capacitors must be
 sufficiently good at that time for that unit.

 Now, whether they will go on working is something that is very hard to tell. 
 But that applies
 to every other component in the unit. An IC might work find now and suffer 
 bond-out wire
 failure later on the same day.

 Just like the NiCd and SLA batteries I mentioned, aluminum electrolytic
 capacitors by their very electrochemical nature degrade as they age and as
 they are used. You cannot claim that a 20-30 year aluminum electrolytic

 Semiconductors also degrade both with time and use. I would think a 
 30-year-old
 3 terminal regulator IC was also beyond its design life. So do you replace 
 those
 'anyway'? The damage done if one those fails is likely to greatly exceed the 
 damage
 done if a capacitor fails.

 Do you replace all EPROMs in case they develop bit-rot (They are most likely 
 way
 beyond their design life by now)?

 -tony



-- 
Bill
vintagecomputer.net


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread Lyle Bickley
On Mon, 20 Jul 2015 23:14:36 -0600
Eric Smith space...@gmail.com wrote:

 On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 4:46 PM, Rich Alderson
 ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org wrote:
  industry white papers with tables of decay rates for
  the aluminum electrolytics that indicate that, *no matter what*, they lose
  capacitance over time, until c. 14 years from manufacturer date they are at 
  10%
  of rating.
 
 That's very interesting. I haven't seen those white papers, but the
 no matter what must in fact depend on something, since on the PDP-1
 Restoration Project we found that most of the 40 year old aluminum
 electrolytic capacitors still met their original specifications,
 including capacitance within rated tolerance. Of the few electrolytic
 capacitors that had failed, the problem was a catastrophic failure,
 not the capacitance being outside the rated tolerance.
 
 In the PDP-1, we preferred to keep the original components as much as
 possible. Had there been a capacitor, the failure which would have
 caused extensive damage to other components, we would have given
 serious consideration to replacing it. However, that was not the case
 for any of the capacitors in the PDP-1.
 
 Had our analysis indicated any expected benefit to replacing all of
 the electrolytic capacitors, we would have done so, and bagged and
 tagged the originals similar to what we did with failed components, so
 that they could be replaced if it ever was desired to return the
 artifact to its pre-restoration condition.
 
 I'm not recommending against LCM's policy, but I also wouldn't
 necessarily encourage anyone to adopt it, nor to adopt the practices
 of the CHM PDP-1 Restoration Project, without studying the issue.

As Eric, I'm a member of the PDP-1 Restoration Team. The PDP-1 restoration was 
completed in 2005 - and annually we check the power supplies for voltage, 
ripple, etc. Not one of the re-formed capacitors have failed in the ten years 
since the completion of the restoration.

I also re-formed all P/S capacitors in my PDP-8/S in September, 2013. Not one 
has failed since...

Same with my EAI TR-20 Analog computer. And so it is for all the systems in my 
collection...

IMHO, these white papers indicating that ALL aluminum electrolytic capacitors 
decay is obvious nonsense - based on real life experience - not someones 
theory...

Lyle

-- 
73  AF6WS
Bickley Consulting West Inc.
http://bickleywest.com

Black holes are where God is dividing by zero


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread Mike Stein
- Original Message - 
From: Tothwolf tothw...@concentric.net

Sent: Monday, July 20, 2015 10:03 PM


... I too am getting tired of repeating the same 
thing over and over; compiling this sort of 
information in a single location might be 
helpful.


As it happens I am getting tired of _reading_ the 
same thing over and over; another of those 
Windows/Linux, PC/Mac etc. debates that contribute 
little and never change anyone's opinion. By all 
means, compile a _balanced_ summary and host it 
somewhere for reference.


I suspect that the real criterion for whether to 
shotgun-replace caps is who is paying/getting paid 
for the materials and labour ;-).


FWIW I'm certainly not about to spend 100s of 
dollars, not to mention time spent in sourcing and 
replacing,  to replace the caps in systems that 
are running perfectly just in case...


m 



Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread Tothwolf

On Tue, 21 Jul 2015, Mike Stein wrote:

I suspect that the real criterion for whether to shotgun-replace caps is 
who is paying/getting paid for the materials and labour ;-).


I dunno about that. When I've done commercial boards such as industrial 
process controllers and CPUs for customers with nearly unlimited funds, I 
charged the customer based on an hourly rate. Since I use a vacuum 
desoldering tool, changing out 10-15 aluminum electrolytics on a board 
took me not much more time than 1-2. Most of the time spent on a board 
that comes out of the field is spent on cleaning, testing (before and 
after repairs) and prep, and it only takes a few seconds to pull the 
solder off of a couple of component leads. Replacing aged electrolytics 
wholesale on these types of boards also meant I didn't need to worry that 
the same board would be back on my bench again in the next 3-6 months. 
These days, I'm not taking on any new commercial work though, there was 
just too much demand due to all those shoddy far-east made capacitors, and 
it meant I pushed aside all my own projects.


I guess from a business standpoint, if I had been trying to make extra 
money on boards repeat failing in the field and having to come back in for 
repairs over and over, changing out only 1 or 2 aluminum electrolytics 
would have made sense. That said, industrial process equipment tends to 
run 24/7 and is expected to be 100% reliable. If something shuts down, it 
tends to cost a heck of a lot of money, so I would no doubt have lost many 
customers.


FWIW I'm certainly not about to spend 100s of dollars, not to mention 
time spent in sourcing and replacing, to replace the caps in systems


100s? Where are you sourcing your components from? The typical board I 
rebuild has a component cost of about $20 or less. Smaller switchmode PSUs 
with a bunch of 10-18mm radials might be closer to $35-50. Larger PSUs 
/might/ cost closer to $100 if they have several large screw terminal 
capacitors in them. All things considered, that isn't very much money in 
today's dollars, and considering the full replacement cost of some of 
these boards (if they are even available), those preventive maintenance 
costs are an absolute bargain, /especially/ if you are doing the work 
yourself on your own time.



that are running perfectly just in case...


How do you -know- they are running perfectly? Just because a widget 
itself is functioning, you have no way of knowing if that capacitor is 
working 100% properly /unless/ you actually remove it from circuit and run 
a full battery of tests on it. Simply measuring the capacitance with a DMM 
while a capacitor is in circuit isn't good enough.


Given that a typical aluminum electrolytic capacitor costs anywhere from 
$0.12-$0.15 (4mm or 5mm diameter radials) to about $1.00 (12mm or 16mm 
diameter radial), it also doesn't make much sense to desolder a 20 year 
old part, spend at a minimum 5 or more minutes testing it, and then solder 
it back in. It it much more economical to pull the old part and install a 
new one and be done with it. (You also don't have to worry if the 
desoldering and resoldering process might have damaged the original parts 
end-seals.) That said, I personally pre-test new parts, in bulk, before I 
put them into my stock, so I know ahead of time that I'm installing 
known-good parts.


On many occasions I've cut open old aluminum electrolytics, and the guts 
very much do deteriorate with age. In addition to corrosion of the foil 
(black spots and pitting) and foil to terminal junctions (corrosion), one 
thing I particularly noticed was the more operating hours an aluminum 
electrolytic capacitor had on it, the more its electrolyte and paper 
insulator tended to smell bad compared to an otherwise identical (same 
brand and series) part that had very low hours. These are all clear signs 
of deterioration.


To those who advocate keeping old aluminum electrolytics in service, I 
have to also ask, would you also try to recondition 20 year old NiCd or 
SLA batteries and keep those in service too?


The bottom line really is, if you want something to be as reliable as you 
can possibly make it, you replace old aluminum electrolytic capacitors 
which are outside of their expected service life. If you don't care if 
something fails over and over, or you actually like to have the same 
widget on your service bench year after year, or month after month, you 
just replace 1 or 2.


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread Chuck Guzis

On 07/21/2015 06:46 PM, Tothwolf wrote:


I dunno about that. When I've done commercial boards such as industrial
process controllers and CPUs for customers with nearly unlimited funds,
I charged the customer based on an hourly rate. Since I use a vacuum
desoldering tool, changing out 10-15 aluminum electrolytics on a board
took me not much more time than 1-2. Most of the time spent on a board
that comes out of the field is spent on cleaning, testing (before and
after repairs) and prep, and it only takes a few seconds to pull the
solder off of a couple of component leads. Replacing aged electrolytics
wholesale on these types of boards also meant I didn't need to worry
that the same board would be back on my bench again in the next 3-6
months. These days, I'm not taking on any new commercial work though,
there was just too much demand due to all those shoddy far-east made
capacitors, and it meant I pushed aside all my own projects.


Commercial/industrial boards are a whole different matter and I agree 
with you there.  The quality of the service performed is of more 
importance, often that the cost.  Consider a floppy controller board for 
a name-brand PLC.  You can get one for about $5000--not the PLC, but the 
floppy board.  The customer expects the PLC to last the life of the tool 
it's controlling--30 years is not atypical.


I've often thought that if some of the scrappers out there could 
recognize some of the stuff they ground up for precious metals, they'd 
think twice.


I might think twice about doing a board that was fragile with age, but 
otherwise, change 'em all.  Like replacing both headlight bulbs if one 
goes out--it's just a matter of time before the other one goes.


--Chuck




RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread Tothwolf

On Tue, 21 Jul 2015, tony duell wrote:

On Mon, 20 Jul 2015, Tothwolf wrote:

Yes, the grid cap would /usually/ be a non-polarized wax paper type, 
which tend to be very unreliable. I've yet to find a wax paper type 
which will pass a leak test and those are also on my replace on sight 
list.


Of course you wouldn't want to replace mica, ceramic, or plastic film 
parts without good reason, but if a set is going to be more than just a 
shelf queen, aluminum electrolytics and wax paper capacitors are a


It depends a lot on the circuit. If replacing the capacitor is going to 
involve major realignment and the original is probably OK and leakage is 
not going to do further damage (likely in the case of a tuning 
component) then I will leave it and only replace if it fails.


IMO an alignment is simply part of the restoration process. When I service 
a set, I do so expecting that it is going to be used and thus needs to 
have an accurate dial vs just sitting on a shelf. Simply installing 
replacement aluminum electrolytics and wax-paper capacitors is not likely 
to affect alignment. It is extremely common however to find sets where 
someone else has previously mucked up the original alignment in an attempt 
to work around electrically leaky wax-paper capacitors which have caused 
the band the drift.


must-replace item. Carbon film resistors in this sort of equipment 
should also be tested, however I only replace those which are either 
bad or out of tolerance (some brands held up better than others).


This is inconistent. A capacitor which is failing (starting to leak, 
say) may get worse. A resistor which is drifting may get worse. Either 
can do more damage when it fails. Why replace the cap and not the 
resistor?


Why is that inconsistent? If I test a carbon comp resistor and it measures 
within spec, there isn't much reason to replace it. Unlike an aluminum 
electrolytic capacitor, a carbon comp resistor is very stable chemically. 
Carbon comp resistors tend to drift due to absorption of moisture, and 
while it is possible to dry one out in a toaster oven at a controlled 
temperature, the resistor will again drift out again over time, so if one 
is out of spec, replacement is the best option.


I probably would replace certain safety-related capacitors in live 
chassis sets, like ones that isolate external sockets, using class Y 
replacements. But that;s about it.


That's a good idea, however something to keep in mind is that class Y 
safety rated capacitors are not designed not to short (and not put say a


I thought that was the difference between class X (will fail in a safe 
way, but may short) and class Y (will not short). The latter are to be 
used where 'failure of the capacitor may expose a person to electric 
shock' according to the data sheets I've read.


In general class X go across the mains, class Y from mains to ground.


Except that the chassis in modern equipment is /expected/ to be connected 
to ground, unlike a floating or hot chassis in a vintage radio. Both class 
X and class Y can fail short. A class Y tends to have a thicker dielectric 
and/or a lower voltage rating, which means it is less likely to fail 
short, not that is cannot fail short.


I consider replacing aluminum electrolytics to be preventive 
maintenance. One wouldn't drive a 20-50 year old car with original 
hoses, belts, and tires, and IMO it is just common sense to replace 
electronic components such as aluminum electrolytic capacitors which 
have extremely well documented life expectancies and failure rates.


I do wonder if this data is based on the cheaper components used in 
consumer electronics (paticularly things like AA5s) and that the 
capacitors used in computers were of a much higher quality and longer 
life.


Possibly. Radio repair shops of the AA5 era also had a vested interest in 
turning a set around as quickly (and as cheaply) as possible, and a set 
back in again in the same year for another repair was also good for their 
business. Back then, consumers expected their radios to need routine 
service, so people were less likely to even question it. I've come to this 
conclusion based on the types and quality of radio shop repairs I've seen 
in these old sets. I have a radio in my to-do queue right now (an AA5) 
which was owned by my grandparents, where a shop needlessly hacked the 
leads off a Centralab hybrid module and replaced about half of its 
functionality with some really cheap wax-paper capacitors and a handful of 
resistors (after searching for a number of years, I actually managed to 
find a NOS module for it, so that part of the circuit will be restored to 
its original condition when I eventually get to that project).


As far as shotgun-repairs go, one of my own pet peeves are those out 
there selling cap kits (usually really low quality [sometimes 
counterfeit]


Oh don't get me started


Cap kits or counterfeits? ;)

Best way to avoid counterfeits...do not buy modern name 

Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread Chuck Guzis

On 07/21/2015 06:56 PM, Tothwolf wrote:


I've often wondered why they even bother to put that polarity stripe on
modern film parts when it doesn't actually indicate the outside foil
terminal. Maybe this is something that has become lost knowledge to
manufacturers over the years to the point where even Vishay/Sprague
doesn't know what that black indicator stripe was actually used for?


And not so modern parts.  I've still got a few pounds of paper-oil 
capacitors (lots of Rifas) from the 1980s.  Picked them up as mixed NOS 
priced about 25 cents per pound.  About half are market with polarity 
marks. I never understood why.


I used one recently to replace an ignition capacitor in a 40 year old 
chainsaw (a Stihl 056).  Works a treat.


--Chuck



Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread Mike Stein
- Original Message - 
From: Tothwolf tothw...@concentric.net
To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic 
Posts cctalk@classiccmp.org

Sent: Tuesday, July 21, 2015 9:46 PM
Subject: Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved



On Tue, 21 Jul 2015, Mike Stein wrote:


...
FWIW I'm certainly not about to spend 100s of 
dollars, not to mention time spent in sourcing 
and replacing, to replace the caps in systems


100s? Where are you sourcing your components 
from? The typical board I rebuild has a 
component cost of about $20 or less. Smaller 
switchmode PSUs with a bunch of 10-18mm radials 
might be closer to $35-50. Larger PSUs /might/ 
cost closer to $100 if they have several large 
screw terminal capacitors in them. All things 
considered, that isn't very much money in 
today's dollars, and considering the full 
replacement cost of some of these boards (if 
they are even available), those preventive 
maintenance costs are an absolute bargain, 
/especially/ if you are doing the work yourself 
on your own time.


Maybe it isn't much money in your world, 
especially when someone else is paying. I just 
priced the main power supply caps in one of my 
Cromemco systems and it comes to ~ $120 (and all 
special order of course); if I replaced all the 
caps in all my (working) systems as you and a few 
others are suggesting across the board regardless 
of the system, condition etc., it would easily 
exceed $2000 if I could even find suitable 
replacements. And what about those prone to 
explode tantalums while we're at it...


If you're recapping 20-year old or newer circuit 
boards for customers as you apparently are then it 
does indeed often make sense to replace all the 
aluminum electrolytics, especially if the board 
has problems or there's visual evidence of 
failure, but let those of us with older, 
well-working systems use our _judgement_ whether 
to replace or not. OK?


To each his own...


that are running perfectly just in case...


How do you -know- they are running perfectly?


They reliably do what they're supposed to do.

m 



RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread Peter Coghlan
Rich Alderson ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org wrote:

From: Peter Coghlan
Sent: Saturday, July 18, 2015 1:27 AM

 Rich Alderson ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org wrote:

 It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
 supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
 load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.

 It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power 
 supplies.
 The rest of the advice is sound.

 Can you please clarify if this statement represents the policy of the Living
 Computer Museum or is it something more personal?  Perhaps some qualification
 or a re-phrasing would be useful as it does not appear to make sense as it
 stands?

This is the policy of Living Computer Museum.  It is based on the cumulative
experience of multiple very senior electrical engineers[1] doing restorations
here, in conjunction with industry white papers with tables of decay rates for
the aluminum electrolytics that indicate that, *no matter what*, they lose
capacitance over time, until c. 14 years from manufacturer date they are at 10%
of rating.

When, in 2004, we first began restorations of the systems that eventually
became LCM, we followed the sage advice of those who described how to re-form
electrolytic capacitors.  Months of frustrating results eventually led to the
search for industry literature on the topic; the result of that research was
the formulation of our policy regarding this practice--that it is not worth the
time and effort for minimal results.

 I think you may have seen or participated in some of the many discussions we
 have had on this topic on this list?  In light of these discussions, I find 
 it
 hard to see how a categorical statement such as this one could be justified.

Since the proponents of this practice make categorical statements with no
evidence that they want to listen to reasoned explanations, I long ago gave
over trying to convince them, and simply respond when someone makes a statement
to a newbie which will result in frustration and failure for the unfortunate
recipient of this advice.


Rich


[1] NB:  I am not now, nor have I ever claimed to be, a hardware engineer of
any stripe, and more particularly not an electronics specialist.  I am,
nonetheless, capable of reading and understanding research papers with
statistics that back up the claims being made even if I could not devise
the experiment to test them.  I rely on my colleagues who are experts to
assure me that the writers are not smoking crack.


Rich Alderson
Vintage Computing Sr. Systems Engineer
Living Computer Museum
2245 1st Avenue S
Seattle, WA 98134

mailto:ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org

http://www.LivingComputerMuseum.org/


Hi Rich,

Thank you for providing further clarification but please understand that I was
trying to give you an opportunity to get out of the hole you were digging, not
trying to encourage you to dig deeper.

I was hoping to avoid going back over the issues which have been previously
debated at length on the list without reaching any conclusions other than that
different people have different strongly held views on the subject but I guess
that was too much to hope for :-(

Regards,
Peter Coghlan.


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread Christian Corti

On Mon, 20 Jul 2015, Rich Alderson wrote:
the aluminum electrolytics that indicate that, *no matter what*, they 
lose capacitance over time, until c. 14 years from manufacturer date 
they are at 10% of rating.


Please excuse me, but this is utter nonsense.

Most electrolytics in our machines are 30 years and older, and they just 
work. Those caps that I checked (mostly large filter/smoothing caps), e.g. 
those from the LGP-30 (nearly 60 years old) or Mincal 523 (44 years old), 
are just fine. Smaller ones don't even have to be bothered with. OTOH foil 
caps from the 50s/60s (e.g. ERO/EROFOL/EROID/Wima) tend to lose a bit of 
their isolation and become resistive (several MOhm). This can be a problem 
with AC coupling in tube circuits. Also problematic are more modern foil 
caps in line filters (e.g. X/Y caps), or even oil filled MP caps in power 
supply (magnetic constanters, filters) or motor applications (phase 
shifters).
But admittedly I don't know what crappy electrolytics you have encountered 
in your industry grade machines. Or are we talking of modern 
machines (30 years) ?


[1] NB:  I am not now, nor have I ever claimed to be, a hardware 
engineer of any stripe, and more particularly not an electronics 
specialist.  I am, nonetheless, capable of reading and understanding 
research papers with statistics that back up the claims being made even 
if I could not devise the experiment to test them.  I rely on my 
colleagues who are experts to assure me that the writers are not smoking 
crack.


Statistics... don't believe any statistic that you haven't faked yourself.
Honestly, IMO this doesn't really qualify you as expert in capacitors.
I think those statistics are based on running the caps 24/7 at their 
nominal ratings, but surley they don't apply to moderate museum usage.


Christian


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread tony duell
 
  But yes, selenium rectifiers rarely work now (although there are exceptions)
  and when they fail they can take out the mains transformer. And they smell
  horrible (think of school dinner cabbage!)
 
 Huh? All devices with selenium rectifiers that I/we own are OK. And a
 selenium rectifier only fails if overloaded. See for example the power
 supply of the LGP-30:

I've had many more selenium rectifiers fail than electrolytics. But actually 
yes, I 
do still have some original selenium rectifiers in operation. 

Come to think of it, every UK Telephone 706, 746, 722, 776, etc (The common 
1970's telephones) had a selenium rectifier stack ( 8 diodes) as part of the
voltage regulator circuit. I have never heard of one of those failing.

 And all my radio/TV sets with selenium rectifiers are OK, too. I had to
 replace one in my TV as it had a too high resistance, but only because I
 didn't know at that time that I could re-fasten the nuts of the rectifier
 (selenium rectifier plates can suffer from contact resistances).

The ones I mainly have are those flat 'contact cooled' ones that you bolt onto
the chassis. You can take those apart and bend contacts, etc, but most of the 
time
I replace them with a suitable silicon device.

-tony


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread Christian Corti

On Tue, 21 Jul 2015, tony duell wrote:

But yes, selenium rectifiers rarely work now (although there are exceptions)
and when they fail they can take out the mains transformer. And they smell
horrible (think of school dinner cabbage!)


Huh? All devices with selenium rectifiers that I/we own are OK. And a 
selenium rectifier only fails if overloaded. See for example the power 
supply of the LGP-30:

http://computermuseum.informatik.uni-stuttgart.de/dev_en/lgp30/lgp30.html
Note: the height is about 60cm, power rating IIRC somewhere between 500 
and 1000W!
And all my radio/TV sets with selenium rectifiers are OK, too. I had to 
replace one in my TV as it had a too high resistance, but only because I 
didn't know at that time that I could re-fasten the nuts of the rectifier 
(selenium rectifier plates can suffer from contact resistances).


Christian


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread Tothwolf

On Sun, 19 Jul 2015, dwight wrote:

I have rarely seen static damage to electronic parts. I can imagine that 
if I were in Nevada during winter time, I might see more. There were 
times when, even with a key to be the discharge point that my arm still 
jumped.
On parts, the ones I've seen that I could definitely attribute to static 
were, VFets with no zener input protection and the CMOS parts, 4051, 
4052 and 4053.
The VFets were killed with soldering irons that someone cut the ground 
wires so I couldn't really say it was static in the normal sense.
I doubt any power supply could ever be damage from a discharge to a 
output lead. The ratios of capacitance is too different. The human body 
just doesn't have enough capacitance to mean anything to a power supply 
filter capacitor.
Now, if your talking lighting as the source of static, I've even seen 
those static protection parts blown off boards.

Now that is static damage!
Tinker Dwight


Oddly enough, I have a Sangean ATS-803A (Radioshack DX-440) receiver on my 
bench right now which has static electricity damage. They used two Sony 
2SK152 JFETs (long since discontinued and virtually impossible to source) 
which can be damaged by static electricity merely by touching the 
telescoping antenna. I've replaced the two 2SK152 with Fairchild J113 
JFETs and retrofitted a pair of inverse-paralleled 1N4148 diodes just 
before the antenna selection switch (between ground and the switched side 
of the external antenna jack) to help prevent future damage to the 
replacement JFETs. The receiver still isn't working quite right just yet 
though. It currently works fine on broadcast AM up to 1620KHz (internal 
loopstick antenna) and broadcast FM with the external telescoping antenna, 
but at 1621KHz and above in AM mode, the set is totally deaf. It is 
supposed to use the external telescoping antenna for AM operation above 
1620KHz, but there is still a faulty component somewhere in that portion 
of the circuit.


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-21 Thread dwight

 
 From: a...@p850ug1.demon.co.uk
 To: cctalk@classiccmp.org
 Subject: RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved
 Date: Sun, 19 Jul 2015 14:35:52 +
 
  
 
 Be careful, static daamge does not always show up at the time. You can
 damage an IC, have it work for some time afterwards and then fail. 
 
I'm quite aware of that. I've looked under a microscopeat some parts that were 
mishandled but still working.For how long, one can only guess.Dwight
 
 -tony
  

Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-20 Thread Dave Woyciesjes

On 07/19/2015 02:03 AM, tony duell wrote:


So, tony, if I'm correct, you just called bullshit, right?


I assume this relates to my comments on static damage of PDP11 PSUs,

I am not sure I would quite put it that way (not on a public list :-)) but (a) 
I have never seen a DEC
PSU (in a PDP11 or elsewhere) damaged by static, certainly not to external 
connections and (b)
there were some many PDP11 PSUs with totally different design topologies that 
it would appear
to be impossible to generalise like that.

-tony

	Yeah, that would be it. Not sure what happened to the message I was 
replying to, should have been included


--
--- Dave Woyciesjes
--- CompTIA A+ Certified IT Tech - http://certification.comptia.org/
--- HDI Certified Support Center Analyst - http://www.ThinkHDI.com/
Registered Linux user number 464583

Computers have lots of memory but no imagination.
The problem with troubleshooting is that trouble shoots back.
- from some guy on the internet.


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-20 Thread Mark J. Blair
If I may go back to the original post topic for a moment, what model is that 
line printer that is pictured? I'm on the lookout for a DEC LP32 to go with my 
11/730.

Now on the topic of capacitors: The only component type that I replace on sight 
at this point are the Rifa paper-dielectric EMI suppression caps. Had one go 
incendiary on me so far, and I do a replace-on-sight routine on them because my 
hypothesis of the failure mechanism(*) leads me to believe that they're all 
likely to burn up once the plastic shell has developed any cracks. They're easy 
to recognize: Rectangular, with transparent yellow plastic housings, which are 
usually crazed with fine cracks. Different caps which should not be subject to 
the same failure mechanism are easily available.

(*) Paper dielectric is said to absorb moisture from the atmosphere if not 
sealed. So, I presume that once the yellow plastic shell cracks from old age, 
moisture gets in, and then the caps break down under power. I replace these 
with poly film safety-rated caps with suitable ratings, since the poly film 
shouldn't absorb significant moisture even if the housing seal fails.

-- 
Mark J. Blair, NF6X n...@nf6x.net
http://www.nf6x.net/



RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-20 Thread Tothwolf

On Mon, 20 Jul 2015, tony duell wrote:

Replace - yes, *especially* if you don't have a big budget. Aluminum 
electrolytic capacitors are CHEAP and easy to obtain. Replacement 
semiconductors by comparison are expensive and can be quite difficult 
to find.


Err, have you priced the screw-terminal 'computer grade' electolytic 
capacitors that were used in these PDP11 power supplies. They are not 
cheap, if you can find them at all. And of course NOS ones might be as 
good or bad as the one that's already there. Conversely when I had a 
major disaster in a DEC power regulator brick some years ago (blew 
almost all the transistors and the 723) the replacement parts were easy 
to get (exact replacements, not just equivalents) and were not 
expensive.


I've not replaced any in a PDP11 power supply, however I have replaced 
them in other equipment with equally large PSUs. In the odd case where a 
computer grade screw terminal capacitor is extremely expensive or 
completely unobtainable (those which I've purchased were under $20-30) I 
might be willing to leave an original part in place, *if* it can pass a 
leakage test.



[...]

Ironically, 20-30 years ago this same mindset used to persist with 
people who collected vacuum tube (valve) based radios and television, 
however that attitude no longer seems to be present in those 
communities today (not worth risking an irreplaceable transformer or 
inductor over $5.00-$10.00 worth of aluminum electrolytics).


Odd... I know plenty of people who restore old valve radios and audio 
stuff and not one will blanket-replace all the aluminium electrolytics. 
There is a capacitor that I (and they) would check very carefully, but 
that's not an electrolytic. I refer of course to the coupling capacitor 
to output valve grid. In a lot of radios this is connected to the anode 
(plate) of the audio ampilfier triode so if it leaks it puts a +ve 
voltage on the output valve causing far too high an anode current there.


But even then I (and everyone else I know) would test it, not just 
replace it. Some of those capacitors are very reliable and the 
replacements you get not any better.


Testing each aluminum electrolytic and wax paper capacitor vs replacing 
them all doesn't seem to be the prevailing norm in the vintage radio 
communities today.


Yes, the grid cap would /usually/ be a non-polarized wax paper type, which 
tend to be very unreliable. I've yet to find a wax paper type which will 
pass a leak test and those are also on my replace on sight list.


Of course you wouldn't want to replace mica, ceramic, or plastic film 
parts without good reason, but if a set is going to be more than just a 
shelf queen, aluminum electrolytics and wax paper capacitors are a 
must-replace item. Carbon film resistors in this sort of equipment should 
also be tested, however I only replace those which are either bad or out 
of tolerance (some brands held up better than others).


I probably would replace certain safety-related capacitors in live 
chassis sets, like ones that isolate external sockets, using class Y 
replacements. But that;s about it.


That's a good idea, however something to keep in mind is that class Y 
safety rated capacitors are not designed not to short (and not put say a 
floating chassis at mains potential). Safety rated capacitors are instead 
designed to blow clear while not catching on fire (or otherwise be 
self-extinguishing), should they short out across mains potential. This 
means should a class Y part short, a floating chassis could still be 
placed at mains potential, and that capacitor is not going to blow clear. 
That said, anything is going to be better than a wax paper capacitor, and 
a class Y safety rated part is also much safer in this sort of application 
than a ceramic disc.


Incidentally, do you shotgun-replace 7805s and other 3 terminal 
regulators? If not, why not? They can fail, and if they do they do a lot 
more damage than a failed capacitor.


As a general rule, I do not make shotgun-repairs to electronic equipment. 
While I may replace certain failure-prone parts outright on sight, I still 
prefer to determine which part(s) are causing a malfunction.


I consider replacing aluminum electrolytics to be preventive maintenance. 
One wouldn't drive a 20-50 year old car with original hoses, belts, and 
tires, and IMO it is just common sense to replace electronic components 
such as aluminum electrolytic capacitors which have extremely well 
documented life expectancies and failure rates.


As far as shotgun-repairs go, one of my own pet peeves are those out there 
selling cap kits (usually really low quality [sometimes counterfeit] 
capacitors, too) to newbies which also include a bunch of semiconductors 
(diodes, voltage regulators, and transistors) on the theory that those 
parts fail because they run hot. I've gotten to the point where I will not 
even attempt to service a board which has been botched up by a fat 
fingered newbie who 

RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-20 Thread Tothwolf

On Mon, 20 Jul 2015, Rich Alderson wrote:

On Sat, 18 Jul 2015, Peter Coghlan wrote:

Rich Alderson ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org wrote:


It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in 
power supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some 
kind of load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.


It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power 
supplies. The rest of the advice is sound.


Can you please clarify if this statement represents the policy of the 
Living Computer Museum or is it something more personal?  Perhaps some 
qualification or a re-phrasing would be useful as it does not appear to 
make sense as it stands?


This is the policy of Living Computer Museum.  It is based on the 
cumulative experience of multiple very senior electrical engineers[1] 
doing restorations here, in conjunction with industry white papers with 
tables of decay rates for the aluminum electrolytics that indicate that, 
*no matter what*, they lose capacitance over time, until c. 14 years 
from manufacturer date they are at 10% of rating.


[...]

I think you may have seen or participated in some of the many 
discussions we have had on this topic on this list?  In light of these 
discussions, I find it hard to see how a categorical statement such as 
this one could be justified.


Since the proponents of this practice make categorical statements with 
no evidence that they want to listen to reasoned explanations, I long 
ago gave over trying to convince them, and simply respond when someone 
makes a statement to a newbie which will result in frustration and 
failure for the unfortunate recipient of this advice.


Rich,

Do you happen to have a list of whitepapers and/or links on hand? I too am 
getting tired of repeating the same thing over and over and compiling this 
sort of information in a single location might be helpful. Buried in my 
own archives I have quite a few papers and datasheets in pdf format, but 
they are all mixed in with everything else so finding them would be quite 
a challenge.


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-20 Thread Tothwolf

On Mon, 20 Jul 2015, Mark J. Blair wrote:

Now on the topic of capacitors: The only component type that I replace 
on sight at this point are the Rifa paper-dielectric EMI suppression 
caps. Had one go incendiary on me so far, and I do a replace-on-sight 
routine on them because my hypothesis of the failure mechanism(*) leads 
me to believe that they're all likely to burn up once the plastic shell 
has developed any cracks. They're easy to recognize: Rectangular, with 
transparent yellow plastic housings, which are usually crazed with fine 
cracks. Different caps which should not be subject to the same failure 
mechanism are easily available.


(*) Paper dielectric is said to absorb moisture from the atmosphere if 
not sealed. So, I presume that once the yellow plastic shell cracks from 
old age, moisture gets in, and then the caps break down under power. I 
replace these with poly film safety-rated caps with suitable ratings, 
since the poly film shouldn't absorb significant moisture even if the 
housing seal fails.


Absolutely! I didn't mention those in my previous list since I was focused 
on aluminum electrolytics, but those yellow Rifa parts are an especially 
sore spot in older test gear. My own theory on these is that the swelling 
of the paper is what is causing them to crack. I'm not sure what chemical 
they treat the paper with, but it apparently doesn't hold up long term 
and/or this is just their failure mode as they age and wear out. While 
Rifa still makes these very same safety capacitors, I've been replacing 
them with MKP types from TDK which won't fail in the same way.


Oddly enough, those failing class X and class Y Rifa parts I see seem to 
be early 1980s to mid 1990s vintage gear, which puts them in that same 
20-30 year age I tend to use for replacing aluminum electrolytics.


Another capacitor type which I replace on sight are any wax paper 
capacitors such as you would find in tube (valve) based equipment. The wax 
coated tubular types are easy to spot, but the epoxy covered parts (black 
beauty, bumble bee, etc.) fail the same way. After replacing 100s, if not 
1000s of the things over the years, I've yet to find one, even NOS (which 
always seem to turn up in lots of parts from estates and such), which 
would pass a leak test.


I replace wax paper types with polyester (mylar), polystyrene or ceramic 
discs, depending on how they are used in the circuit (note however that 
for wound foil types, modern replacement parts do not mark the outside 
foil, which needs to be at ground potential in many tube circuits, 
otherwise the circuit can pick up noise and hum).


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-20 Thread Mark J. Blair

 On Jul 20, 2015, at 18:02 , Tothwolf tothw...@concentric.net wrote:
 I replace wax paper types with polyester (mylar), polystyrene or ceramic 
 discs, depending on how they are used in the circuit (note however that for 
 wound foil types, modern replacement parts do not mark the outside foil, 
 which needs to be at ground potential in many tube circuits, otherwise the 
 circuit can pick up noise and hum).


Funny that you mentioned that! I just watched a YouTube video today about how 
to experimentally determine which lead is connected to the outer foil for 
applications where that's important. Modern film caps may have a stripe on one 
end, but it doesn't appear to reliably indicate which lead goes to the outer 
foil.

-- 
Mark J. Blair, NF6X n...@nf6x.net
http://www.nf6x.net/



RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-20 Thread Rich Alderson
From: Peter Coghlan
Sent: Saturday, July 18, 2015 1:27 AM

 Rich Alderson ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org wrote:

 It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
 supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
 load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.

 It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power 
 supplies.
 The rest of the advice is sound.

 Can you please clarify if this statement represents the policy of the Living
 Computer Museum or is it something more personal?  Perhaps some qualification
 or a re-phrasing would be useful as it does not appear to make sense as it
 stands?

This is the policy of Living Computer Museum.  It is based on the cumulative
experience of multiple very senior electrical engineers[1] doing restorations
here, in conjunction with industry white papers with tables of decay rates for
the aluminum electrolytics that indicate that, *no matter what*, they lose
capacitance over time, until c. 14 years from manufacturer date they are at 10%
of rating.

When, in 2004, we first began restorations of the systems that eventually
became LCM, we followed the sage advice of those who described how to re-form
electrolytic capacitors.  Months of frustrating results eventually led to the
search for industry literature on the topic; the result of that research was
the formulation of our policy regarding this practice--that it is not worth the
time and effort for minimal results.

 I think you may have seen or participated in some of the many discussions we
 have had on this topic on this list?  In light of these discussions, I find it
 hard to see how a categorical statement such as this one could be justified.

Since the proponents of this practice make categorical statements with no
evidence that they want to listen to reasoned explanations, I long ago gave
over trying to convince them, and simply respond when someone makes a statement
to a newbie which will result in frustration and failure for the unfortunate
recipient of this advice.


Rich


[1] NB:  I am not now, nor have I ever claimed to be, a hardware engineer of
any stripe, and more particularly not an electronics specialist.  I am,
nonetheless, capable of reading and understanding research papers with
statistics that back up the claims being made even if I could not devise
the experiment to test them.  I rely on my colleagues who are experts to
assure me that the writers are not smoking crack.


Rich Alderson
Vintage Computing Sr. Systems Engineer
Living Computer Museum
2245 1st Avenue S
Seattle, WA 98134

mailto:ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org

http://www.LivingComputerMuseum.org/


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-20 Thread tony duell
 I've not replaced any in a PDP11 power supply, however I have replaced
 them in other equipment with equally large PSUs. In the odd case where a
 computer grade screw terminal capacitor is extremely expensive or
 completely unobtainable (those which I've purchased were under $20-30) I
 might be willing to leave an original part in place, *if* it can pass a
 leakage test.

I was quoted over \pounds 30.00 each for the ones for DEC power bricks. No
thanks. I've yet to have one fail in a couple of dozen of said regulator units.
[...]

 Testing each aluminum electrolytic and wax paper capacitor vs replacing
 them all doesn't seem to be the prevailing norm in the vintage radio
 communities today.

It is over here.

 Yes, the grid cap would /usually/ be a non-polarized wax paper type, which
 tend to be very unreliable. I've yet to find a wax paper type which will
 pass a leak test and those are also on my replace on sight list.
 
 Of course you wouldn't want to replace mica, ceramic, or plastic film
 parts without good reason, but if a set is going to be more than just a
 shelf queen, aluminum electrolytics and wax paper capacitors are a

It depends a lot on the circuit. If replacing the capacitor is going to involve
major realignment and the original is probably OK and leakage is not going
to do further damage (likely in the case of a tuning component) then I will
leave it and only replace if it fails. 

 must-replace item. Carbon film resistors in this sort of equipment should
 also be tested, however I only replace those which are either bad or out
 of tolerance (some brands held up better than others).

This is inconistent. A capacitor which is failing (starting to leak, say) may 
get
worse. A resistor which is drifting may get worse. Either can do more damage
when it fails. Why replace the cap and not the resistor?

  I probably would replace certain safety-related capacitors in live
  chassis sets, like ones that isolate external sockets, using class Y
  replacements. But that;s about it.
 
 That's a good idea, however something to keep in mind is that class Y
 safety rated capacitors are not designed not to short (and not put say a

I thought that was the difference between class X (will fail in a safe way, but
may short) and class Y (will not short). The latter are to be used where
'failure of the capacitor may expose a person to electric shock' according
to the data sheets I've read.

In general class X go across the mains, class Y from mains to ground.

 I consider replacing aluminum electrolytics to be preventive maintenance.
 One wouldn't drive a 20-50 year old car with original hoses, belts, and
 tires, and IMO it is just common sense to replace electronic components
 such as aluminum electrolytic capacitors which have extremely well
 documented life expectancies and failure rates.

I do wonder if this data is based on the cheaper components used in 
consumer electronics (paticularly things like AA5s) and that the capacitors
used in computers were of a much higher quality and longer life. 


 As far as shotgun-repairs go, one of my own pet peeves are those out there
 selling cap kits (usually really low quality [sometimes counterfeit]

Oh don't get me started


 capacitors, too) to newbies which also include a bunch of semiconductors
 (diodes, voltage regulators, and transistors) on the theory that those
 parts fail because they run hot. I've gotten to the point where I will not
 even attempt to service a board which has been botched up by a fat
 fingered newbie who has attempted to install one of those kits.
 
 There is however one component besides certain capacitors which I
 absolutely will replace on sight, no exceptions, period, and those are
 selenium rectifiers. There is nothing good that can be said of selenium
 rectifiers, and it is absolutely trivial to solder in a silicon diode as a
 modern replacement.

In some cases you need a series resistor to compensate for the forward
resistance of the selenium rectifier or the output voltage goes too high.
Particularly in those mains/battery valve radios with 1.5V directly heated
valves that have filament burn-out if you look at them wrongly...

But yes, selenium rectifiers rarely work now (although there are exceptions)
and when they fail they can take out the mains transformer. And they smell
horrible (think of school dinner cabbage!)

-tony



Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-20 Thread Eric Smith
On Mon, Jul 20, 2015 at 4:46 PM, Rich Alderson
ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org wrote:
 industry white papers with tables of decay rates for
 the aluminum electrolytics that indicate that, *no matter what*, they lose
 capacitance over time, until c. 14 years from manufacturer date they are at 
 10%
 of rating.

That's very interesting. I haven't seen those white papers, but the
no matter what must in fact depend on something, since on the PDP-1
Restoration Project we found that most of the 40 year old aluminum
electrolytic capacitors still met their original specifications,
including capacitance within rated tolerance. Of the few electrolytic
capacitors that had failed, the problem was a catastrophic failure,
not the capacitance being outside the rated tolerance.

In the PDP-1, we preferred to keep the original components as much as
possible. Had there been a capacitor, the failure which would have
caused extensive damage to other components, we would have given
serious consideration to replacing it. However, that was not the case
for any of the capacitors in the PDP-1.

Had our analysis indicated any expected benefit to replacing all of
the electrolytic capacitors, we would have done so, and bagged and
tagged the originals similar to what we did with failed components, so
that they could be replaced if it ever was desired to return the
artifact to its pre-restoration condition.

I'm not recommending against LCM's policy, but I also wouldn't
necessarily encourage anyone to adopt it, nor to adopt the practices
of the CHM PDP-1 Restoration Project, without studying the issue.

Eric


RE: RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-19 Thread tony duell
 
 So, tony, if I'm correct, you just called bullshit, right?

I assume this relates to my comments on static damage of PDP11 PSUs,

I am not sure I would quite put it that way (not on a public list :-)) but (a) 
I have never seen a DEC 
PSU (in a PDP11 or elsewhere) damaged by static, certainly not to external 
connections and (b)
there were some many PDP11 PSUs with totally different design topologies that 
it would appear 
to be impossible to generalise like that.

-tony


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-19 Thread Tothwolf

On Fri, 17 Jul 2015, tony duell wrote:

Perhaps.  But not all of it, certainly.  I'm currently four for four 
fixing dead flatscreens by re-capping their power supplies; I imagine 
others have similar experiences.  It's not a huge stretch to imagine


This could be taken to show that modern capacitors are not reliable, and 
given that there are plenty of 40-year-old ones still in use in various 
classic computers here it would be better to leave them as-is


It really depends. If I'm having to replace filter capacitors in a faulty 
PSU or monitor, even if I've isolated the problem to one or two 
capacitors, I would be a fool not to replace them all because the next 
part that fails will be one of those which I didn't replace (been there, 
done that, own the tee shirt). A standard 85C or 65C rated 20-30 year old 
aluminum electrolytic is simply past its useful service life.


More seriously, a lot of modern consumer stuff seems to have 
marginally-rated capacitors (and the use of 85 degree ones doesn't 
help). Possibly on those it is a good idea to replace them. But the ones 
in PDP11s were good quality at the start and were over-spec'd in 
general.


With modern electronics, there are high quality parts and there are really 
cheap parts. Even though the high quality parts are about the same price 
as the really cheap parts when purchased in small quantity (in the one-off 
to a few 1000 quantity), profit-driven consumer electronics manufacturers 
are still going to use the cheaper parts when they can save even $0.01 or 
$0.005 per component or even a few cents on the overall cost of the 
complete widget.


Many of these manufacturers also design their widgets to last for the 
warranty term and no more. If the consumer gets 2-3 years or more out of 
said widget, those manufacturers consider it a loss in terms of potential 
profits. In these cases, wholesale replacement of really cheap capacitors 
with high quality versions from top tier manufacturers (Panasonic, 
Nichicon, Rubycon, etc) can be a /really/ good idea. That said, even the 
top-tier capacitor manufacturers have lower end lines of parts, so it pays 
to do your homework and choose a longer life (usually lower ESR, meaning 
less internal heating and thus longer service life) part when sourcing 
replacements.


Even vintage Mallory and Sprague parts are not without their faults. I 
recently replaced a bunch of early 1980s era Mallory capacitors which 
tested good, but when desoldered from the board, had brown crusty stuff 
around the safety vent in their bottom rubber seals. They might have 
continued to work ok for another year or even 10 years, but the high 
quality replacement parts I put in will be good for at least another 20-30 
years. (The replacement parts also worked better as the DC rails had lower 
ripple after they were installed).


that other power supplies may have similar issues; even if it turns out 
to not be the case, there is probably at least a little can't hurt 
anything, right? running around.


Ah but it can hurt. Damage to the PCB (unlikely, sure), the new part 
might be faulty and thus introduce more faults, you might make an error 
fitting it, and so on. I prefer to only replace that which needs 
replacing.


It really is a case by case basis, however in PSUs, CRT monitors, and 
similar where the components are exposed to higher temperatures, it really 
makes sense to replace 20-30 year old aluminum electrolytics wholesale.


I guess another way to look at it is that an electronic device might still 
be functioning with old aluminum electrolytic capacitors, but is it still 
functioning as good as it was when it was new? A vintage device might have 
used really high quality aluminum electrolytics when it was made, but even 
high quality parts have a finite service life. What you have to decide is 
where to draw the when considering wholesale replacement of aluminum 
electrolytics, which with vintage electronics, I've found tends to be 
somewhere around the 20-30 year point.


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-19 Thread tony duell
 
 I have rarely seen static damage to electronic parts. I can imagine
 that if I were in Nevada during winter time, I might see more. There
 were times when, even with a key to be the discharge point that
 my arm still jumped.

Be careful, static daamge does not always show up at the time. You can
damage an IC, have it work for some time afterwards and then fail. 


 On parts, the ones I've seen that I could definitely attribute to static
 were, VFets with no zener input protection and the CMOS parts,
 4051, 4052 and 4053.
 The VFets were killed with soldering irons that someone cut the
 ground wires so I couldn't really say it was static in the normal sense.
 I doubt any power supply could ever be damage from a discharge
 to a output lead. The ratios of capacitance is too different. The human
 body just doesn't have enough capacitance to mean anything to
 a power supply filter capacitor.

Yes. Static electricity is not magic. It follows well-known physical laws. 
In particular, Q=C*V (using the normal definitions). When you put a static
charge on the human body, the voltage is high becuase the capacitance (to
ground) is low. If you then touch something, effectively its capacitance is in
parallel with yours. The charge redistributes as a result. If the touched thing 
has
a low capacitance, like the input to a MOSFET or CMOS gate (which you want
to be low capacitance in normal use so you can charge/discharge it quickly to
switch said device) then the voltage remains high. Zap!. If you touch the output
of a PSU with around 1millifarad of capacitance to ground then quite simply you
are not carrying enough charge to put a damaging voltage on it. OK, the 
inductance
of the circuit makes a bit of difference (it will slow down the charging of 
said 
capacitor so the voltage may have a small peak above the steady state) but it is
not going to make that much difference. Put it this way, if you connect a 1000uF
capacitor across something (as is done on the outputs of these PSUs) and can
damage it by static from a human body I will be very surprised.

Now let's look at the PDP11/34 PSU regulators. What is in there? Some
bipolar transistors, including power types. And normal semiconductor
diodes. Not things that are commonly thought of as very static sensitive. A
723 bipolar IC. Never heard of that being damaged by static either. And that's
about it.

As I have said before, I don't know about the later PSUs. It's possible the 
SMPSUs
in say a PDP11/94 do have problems from static damage (although I seriously 
doubt 
it's caused by touching external connections). But not the 11/34 supply.


 Now, if your talking lighting as the source of static, I've even seen
 those static protection parts blown off boards.
 Now that is static damage!

Oh sure. No PSU is going to take a lightening strike on input or output. Even a 
strike
nearby might cause a lot of damage. But I don't think that's what we are 
talking about.

-tony


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-19 Thread Jay jaeger
Well, all I can say is that my experience differs.  I have had newer capacitors 
fail, and old ones, too, of course, but nothing points to wholesale replacement 
as a cost or time effective strategy, especially on something like an Altair.  
FWIW, I don't run my vintage machines all that often.  Of course reforming a 
bad capacitor, whatever the failure mode, is going to be useless.

Tothwolf tothw...@concentric.net wrote:

On Fri, 17 Jul 2015, Jay Jaeger wrote:
 On 7/17/2015 1:33 PM, Rich Alderson wrote:

 It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in 
 power supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind 
 of load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.

 It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power 
 supplies. The rest of the advice is sound.

 Replace - no, I don't agree - especially not for those of us who don't
 have the kind of budget that your organization has.  In my experience,
 for equipment of this quality and vintage, 95% or more of the time an
 hour to a few hours of re-forming is all that is necessary - and as Tony
 has pointed out, even that is not often really necessary.

Replace - yes, *especially* if you don't have a big budget. Aluminum 
electrolytic capacitors are CHEAP and easy to obtain. Replacement 
semiconductors by comparison are expensive and can be quite difficult to 
find.

While it might be worthwhile reforming a special purpose NOS electrolytic 
that isn't much older than 15-20 years old, reforming 20-30 year old 
heavily used (read: past usable service life; evaporation of the 
electrolyte, corrosion of the foils and especially foil to terminal 
junctions, etc) is a complete and total waste of time.

Ironically, 20-30 years ago this same mindset used to persist with people 
who collected vacuum tube (valve) based radios and television, however 
that attitude no longer seems to be present in those communities today 
(not worth risking an irreplaceable transformer or inductor over 
$5.00-$10.00 worth of aluminum electrolytics).


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-19 Thread dwight
I have rarely seen static damage to electronic parts. I can imagine
that if I were in Nevada during winter time, I might see more. There
were times when, even with a key to be the discharge point that
my arm still jumped.
On parts, the ones I've seen that I could definitely attribute to static
were, VFets with no zener input protection and the CMOS parts,
4051, 4052 and 4053. 
The VFets were killed with soldering irons that someone cut the
ground wires so I couldn't really say it was static in the normal sense.
I doubt any power supply could ever be damage from a discharge
to a output lead. The ratios of capacitance is too different. The human
body just doesn't have enough capacitance to mean anything to
a power supply filter capacitor.
Now, if your talking lighting as the source of static, I've even seen
those static protection parts blown off boards.
Now that is static damage!
Tinker Dwight
 
  

Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-18 Thread Jay Jaeger
What I am wondering about, though, is the extra current they draw while
they are forming up while the power supply is running.  The capacitor
might survive it (not get so hot that it fails), but the things supply
the higher than ordinary current to it might not.  Killed a bridge
rectifier on a PDP-12 that way.

JRJ

On 7/17/2015 1:31 PM, tony duell wrote:
 
 It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
 supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
 load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.
 
 I am not sure either would have done much good here. The OP said it
 ran OK for an hour or so, when you test a PSU on dummy load you 
 typically do it for a lot less time than that, Incidentally, DEC PSUs
 of this type run fine with no load in my experience
 
 Also I have found the capacitors in these units to be very reliable. They
 can fail, of course, but virtually all the DEC bricks I have are on their
 original capacitors. I think I've replaced more chopper transistors than
 capacitors in these.
 
 -tony
 


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-18 Thread Peter Coghlan
Rich Alderson ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org wrote:

  It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
  supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
  load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.

 It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power supplies.
 The rest of the advice is sound.

Rich

 Rich Alderson
 Vintage Computing Sr. Systems Engineer
 Living Computer Museum
 2245 1st Avenue S
 Seattle, WA 98134

 mailto:ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org

 http://www.LivingComputerMuseum.org/ 

Rich,

Can you please clarify if this statement represents the policy of the Living
Computer Museum or is it something more personal?  Perhaps some qualification
or a re-phrasing would be useful as it does not appear to make sense as it
stands?

I think you may have seen or participated in some of the many discussions we
have had on this topic on this list?  In light of these discussions, I find it
hard to see how a categorical statement such as this one could be justified.

Regards,
Peter Coghlan.


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-18 Thread John Robertson

Oh, sorry, didn't realize they used switchers for the PDP-11s.

However I was talking with a friend of mine last night about my error, 
and he told me that the switching supplies for the PDP-11s were very 
unreliable back in the day. He often had to troubleshoot the machines 
back then. A common failure was caused by static electric shock to the 
machine would blow the supply. NO carpets allowed!!


John :-#)#

On 07/17/2015 2:19 PM, Jay Jaeger wrote:

U - his PDP-11/34 most certainly does use switching power
regulators.  ;)

On 7/17/2015 4:06 PM, John Robertson wrote:

On 07/17/2015 11:53 AM, Mouse wrote:

I do find this witch-hunt against capacitors to be curious, given how
few I've found to have failed.  I suspect a lot of it comes from
audiophools who think this is the way to fix anything...

Perhaps.  But not all of it, certainly.  I'm currently four for four
fixing dead flatscreens by re-capping their power supplies; I imagine
others have similar experiences.  It's not a huge stretch to imagine
that other power supplies may have similar issues; even if it turns out
to not be the case, there is probably at least a little can't hurt
anything, right? running around.

/~\ The ASCII  Mouse
\ / Ribbon Campaign
   X  Against HTMLmo...@rodents-montreal.org
/ \ Email! 7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39  4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B


This is not surprising given the vintages of the machines. Modern
machines using switching power supplies (15kHz+) must have capacitors
with low ESR and high capacity to run properly.

Older linear power supplies ran at 50/60hz and as such the capacitors
had much less ripple current (and low frequency to boot) to deal with
and the engineers typically over designed the values of capacitors to
allow for some degradation. The machines you are playing with cost
fortunes back in the day - they HAD to be reliable as possible.

Modern caps run at or near their rated temperature (105C) last around
1,000 to 5,000 hours. The old linear supplies rarely heated the caps
much over 40C and thus the caps would last decades...I put fans on our
LCD monitors in our games and they last just fine.

No fan? Expect a year or two at most before failure.

John :-#)#





RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-18 Thread tony duell
 
 Oh, sorry, didn't realize they used switchers for the PDP-11s.

There have been _many_ DEC PSU designed used for the PDP11. I think all of them 
used some 
kind of switching regulator for the +5V line. A quick glance at the printsets 
will settle it..

 However I was talking with a friend of mine last night about my error,
 and he told me that the switching supplies for the PDP-11s were very
 unreliable back in the day. He often had to troubleshoot the machines
 back then. A common failure was caused by static electric shock to the
 machine would blow the supply. NO carpets allowed!!

That is (a) meaningless and (b) totally contrary to mine (and others) 
experiences.

It's meaningless because there are so many 'PDP11' power supplies. There are 
some which use
a mains transformer followed by step-down switching regulators. There are some 
which are more
conventional SMPSUs, rectifying the mains and chopping the 350V so produced. 
There are some which
are multiple versions of that in one box (and at least one of those has a 
switching supply running off the
350V DC rail which produces a single 36V output which is then regulated with 
more switching regulators).

I do not believe all those designs have the same failure modes, or responses to 
static damage.

However, I have worked on many PDP11s, with all sorts of PSUs. Now admittedly I 
am careful about 
static, even working on bipolar circuitry. But not to the point of being silly 
about it. And I will state that I
have never damaged (or even caused to trip) a PDP11 PSU by a static zap to any 
of the output rails. And 
if a static zap to the casing of the machine damages the supply I would want to 
check the mains earthing 
(grounding) -- preferably before a fault causes somebody to get killed.

-tony


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-18 Thread Rod Smallwood

More myths and ledgends.
As I remember it  this all started with the arrival of FET's having a 
very high input impedance due to narrow gate areas.

If you were daft enough not to have a  path to earth
and let a charge build up on the gate then you could exceed the 
breakdown voltage across the junction.


I used to see the DEC field service statistics and  PSU failures due to 
static build up were rare.

Blown filter capacitors and burned up resistors were more the norm.

TTL was was not imune to over voltage but not via static build up.

Think about a CRT VDU. lots of high voltage and static but no charge up 
related failures.


Rod Smallwood






On 18/07/2015 20:31, tony duell wrote:

Oh, sorry, didn't realize they used switchers for the PDP-11s.

There have been _many_ DEC PSU designed used for the PDP11. I think all of them 
used some
kind of switching regulator for the +5V line. A quick glance at the printsets 
will settle it..


However I was talking with a friend of mine last night about my error,
and he told me that the switching supplies for the PDP-11s were very
unreliable back in the day. He often had to troubleshoot the machines
back then. A common failure was caused by static electric shock to the
machine would blow the supply. NO carpets allowed!!

That is (a) meaningless and (b) totally contrary to mine (and others) 
experiences.

It's meaningless because there are so many 'PDP11' power supplies. There are 
some which use
a mains transformer followed by step-down switching regulators. There are some 
which are more
conventional SMPSUs, rectifying the mains and chopping the 350V so produced. 
There are some which
are multiple versions of that in one box (and at least one of those has a 
switching supply running off the
350V DC rail which produces a single 36V output which is then regulated with 
more switching regulators).

I do not believe all those designs have the same failure modes, or responses to 
static damage.

However, I have worked on many PDP11s, with all sorts of PSUs. Now admittedly I 
am careful about
static, even working on bipolar circuitry. But not to the point of being silly 
about it. And I will state that I
have never damaged (or even caused to trip) a PDP11 PSU by a static zap to any 
of the output rails. And
if a static zap to the casing of the machine damages the supply I would want to 
check the mains earthing
(grounding) -- preferably before a fault causes somebody to get killed.

-tony




Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-18 Thread Jules Richardson

On 07/17/2015 11:17 PM, tony duell wrote:

On the other hand if the +5V line did get too high it could have wiped out
just about every IC in the unit. Ouch!. I've only ever had this happen once, and
it was in a much lesser machine than a PDP11 (fortunately).


Many years ago, I managed to feed +12V into an Acorn Atom which was 
expecting +5V (the on-board regulators were bypassed to allow it to run 
from an external regulated 5V PSU, rather than the usual unregulated +9V).


Amazingly, it survived - although it makes me wonder if the experience 
dramatically reduced the lifespan of the TTL ICs though, even if they 
didn't immediately show any failure.


cheers

Jules



Re: RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-18 Thread David Woyciesjes
So, tony, if I'm correct, you just called bullshit, right?

-- 
--- Dave Woyciesjes
--- ICQ# 905818
--- CompTIA A+ Certified IT Tech -http://certification.comptia.org/--- HDI 
Certified Support Center Analyst -http://www.ThinkHDI.com/Registered Linux user 
number 464583

Computers have lots of memory but no imagination. The problem with 
troubleshooting is that trouble shoots back. - from some guy on the internet.



Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread Mouse
 I do find this witch-hunt against capacitors to be curious, given how
 few I've found to have failed.  I suspect a lot of it comes from
 audiophools who think this is the way to fix anything...

Perhaps.  But not all of it, certainly.  I'm currently four for four
fixing dead flatscreens by re-capping their power supplies; I imagine
others have similar experiences.  It's not a huge stretch to imagine
that other power supplies may have similar issues; even if it turns out
to not be the case, there is probably at least a little can't hurt
anything, right? running around.

/~\ The ASCII Mouse
\ / Ribbon Campaign
 X  Against HTMLmo...@rodents-montreal.org
/ \ Email!   7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39  4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread wulfman
some are good some are bad.

http://www.badcaps.net/


here is all the info you ever need on today's bad caps
not so much on yesteryears bad caps



On 7/17/2015 11:53 AM, Mouse wrote:
 I do find this witch-hunt against capacitors to be curious, given how
 few I've found to have failed.  I suspect a lot of it comes from
 audiophools who think this is the way to fix anything...
 Perhaps.  But not all of it, certainly.  I'm currently four for four
 fixing dead flatscreens by re-capping their power supplies; I imagine
 others have similar experiences.  It's not a huge stretch to imagine
 that other power supplies may have similar issues; even if it turns out
 to not be the case, there is probably at least a little can't hurt
 anything, right? running around.

 /~\ The ASCII   Mouse
 \ / Ribbon Campaign
  X  Against HTML  mo...@rodents-montreal.org
 / \ Email! 7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39  4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B



-- 
The contents of this e-mail and any attachments are intended solely for the use 
of the named
addressee(s) and may contain confidential and/or privileged information. Any 
unauthorized use,
copying, disclosure, or distribution of the contents of this e-mail is strictly 
prohibited by
the sender and may be unlawful. If you are not the intended recipient, please 
notify the sender
immediately and delete this e-mail.



Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread Todd Killingsworth
I suspect part of the swap'em ALL out mentality comes from the 90's when
some botched industrial espionage had some of the bottom-tier cap
manufacturers using a dodgy electrolytic formula for their caps.  These
caps would have a frequent failure rate..

While not an issue for pre-90's electronics,  it has fostered the mentality
of full replacement for 'newer' electronics i.e. arcade/pinball machines

Todd Killingsworth

On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 2:42 PM, tony duell a...@p850ug1.demon.co.uk wrote:

 
   It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
   supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
   load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.
 
  It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power
 supplies.

 Could you, please, explain why? And how often should this be done? Every
 week, every month, every year, or what?

 FWIW, the number PSU elecrtrolytics I have replaced can be counted on the
 fingers of
 one hand -- in unary. Well, perhaps both hands. But it's 1% of all the
 PSU electrolytic
 capacitors I own.

 Only 2 cases spring to mind :

 The PSU in my 11/44 had a high ESR capacitor on the +36V rail (all other
 caps in the machine
 were fine)

 I changed the 2 mains smoothing capacitors in my HP120 not because they
 were electrically
 defective (they tested fine) but because one was bulging a little on top
 and had it exploded it would
 have hit the neck of the CRT with all the problems that would be likely to
 cause.

 I do find this witch-hunt against capacitors to be curious, given how few
 I've found to have
 failed. I suspect a lot of it comes from audiophools who think this is the
 way to fix anything...

 -tony



PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread devin davison
Devin here, I had asked for advice on how to move a PDP 11 as well as how
to lock the heads on the RL Drives. It was quite a move. Ive never driven
in a large city before, dealing with traffic was more trouble than it was
to move and load up the equipment. Anyhow, i put a few images of what I got
up on a postimage gallery, which can be viewed here :

http://postimg.org/gallery/1xuwq2s6y/

It was at least working for a hour or so
I was trying to enter a short program at the front panel and there was a
clicking sound followed by a burning smell. I cut the power, the front
panel is unresponsive now, so I'm going to need to look over the power
supply for starters. He did include a second empty PDP 11/34 chassis,
perhaps the power supply in that one is in better condition.

--Devin


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread tony duell
 
  It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
  supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
  load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.
 
 It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power supplies.

Could you, please, explain why? And how often should this be done? Every
week, every month, every year, or what?

FWIW, the number PSU elecrtrolytics I have replaced can be counted on the 
fingers of
one hand -- in unary. Well, perhaps both hands. But it's 1% of all the PSU 
electrolytic
capacitors I own. 

Only 2 cases spring to mind :

The PSU in my 11/44 had a high ESR capacitor on the +36V rail (all other caps 
in the machine
were fine)

I changed the 2 mains smoothing capacitors in my HP120 not because they were 
electrically 
defective (they tested fine) but because one was bulging a little on top and 
had it exploded it would
have hit the neck of the CRT with all the problems that would be likely to 
cause.

I do find this witch-hunt against capacitors to be curious, given how few I've 
found to have 
failed. I suspect a lot of it comes from audiophools who think this is the way 
to fix anything...

-tony


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread Jay Jaeger
It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.

JRJ

On 7/17/2015 11:49 AM, devin davison wrote:
 Devin here, I had asked for advice on how to move a PDP 11 as well as how
 to lock the heads on the RL Drives. It was quite a move. Ive never driven
 in a large city before, dealing with traffic was more trouble than it was
 to move and load up the equipment. Anyhow, i put a few images of what I got
 up on a postimage gallery, which can be viewed here :
 
 http://postimg.org/gallery/1xuwq2s6y/
 
 It was at least working for a hour or so
 I was trying to enter a short program at the front panel and there was a
 clicking sound followed by a burning smell. I cut the power, the front
 panel is unresponsive now, so I'm going to need to look over the power
 supply for starters. He did include a second empty PDP 11/34 chassis,
 perhaps the power supply in that one is in better condition.
 
 --Devin
 


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread tony duell

 It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
 supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
 load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.

I am not sure either would have done much good here. The OP said it
ran OK for an hour or so, when you test a PSU on dummy load you 
typically do it for a lot less time than that, Incidentally, DEC PSUs
of this type run fine with no load in my experience

Also I have found the capacitors in these units to be very reliable. They
can fail, of course, but virtually all the DEC bricks I have are on their
original capacitors. I think I've replaced more chopper transistors than
capacitors in these.

-tony


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread Rich Alderson
 It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
 supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
 load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.

It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power supplies.
The rest of the advice is sound.

Rich

Rich Alderson
Vintage Computing Sr. Systems Engineer
Living Computer Museum
2245 1st Avenue S
Seattle, WA 98134

mailto:ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org

http://www.LivingComputerMuseum.org/ 


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread tony duell
 
 I was trying to enter a short program at the front panel and there was a
 clicking sound followed by a burning smell. I cut the power, the front
 panel is unresponsive now, so I'm going to need to look over the power

Did you see anything on the panel when it died (was the numeric display still
alight) ? 

You had better hope that the +5V line didn't go high and cook all the ICs in the
machine. DEC PSUs of that vintage do have crowbar circuits though.

 supply for starters. He did include a second empty PDP 11/34 chassis,
 perhaps the power supply in that one is in better condition.

The PSU in this machine is relatively repairer-friendly. 

There is a big mains transformer in the centre of the PSU chassis (at the back 
of the CPU). It
takes mains in (there are 2 primary windings, each 115V, they are connected in 
parallel for US
mains and series for European mains). It has several secondaries, each of about 
20V-30V AC

Under the mains transformer is a little unit that contains the mains switching 
relay and control
circuits, and a simple linear PSU for the +15V rail. I think the LTC (line time 
clock), ACLO and DCLO
(power failure signals) come from that too. The main supply rails (+5V and 
-15V) come from 'bricks'
that fit either side of the transformer. These are swtiching regulators that 
take in the 20V or so from
the transformer and bring it down to the desired voltage. Although they are 
switchers, the maximum 
voltage inside is just the rectified input (say about 40V DC) and is thus a lot 
nicer to work on than 
a mains-operated switcher. The bricks are based round the 723 IC along with 
some transistors, an 
inductor, flyback diode, capacitors, etc.

What I would do is disconnect the logic backplane power (at the distribution 
connectors under the PSU)
then take the PSU covers off, take out the bottom 2 screws each side and loosen 
the top on so the PSU can 
hinge away from the CPU and remove the power bricks. Power up the transformer 
on its own (maybe with
a series light bub) and check that is OK. Then try to debug the bricks. If you 
have a bench PSU with current
limiting run them (one at a time) off that (they will happing run from a DC 
input) and see what happens. 
The +5V brick just needs the 20V-30V input, the -15V one _also_ needs a +15V 
supply.

-tony



Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread Brent Hilpert
On 2015-Jul-17, at 11:42 AM, tony duell wrote:
 It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
 supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
 load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.
 
 It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power 
 supplies.
 
 Could you, please, explain why? And how often should this be done? Every
 week, every month, every year, or what?
 
 FWIW, the number PSU elecrtrolytics I have replaced can be counted on the 
 fingers of
 one hand -- in unary. Well, perhaps both hands. But it's 1% of all the PSU 
 electrolytic
 capacitors I own. 
 
 Only 2 cases spring to mind :
 
 The PSU in my 11/44 had a high ESR capacitor on the +36V rail (all other caps 
 in the machine
 were fine)
 
 I changed the 2 mains smoothing capacitors in my HP120 not because they were 
 electrically 
 defective (they tested fine) but because one was bulging a little on top and 
 had it exploded it would
 have hit the neck of the CRT with all the problems that would be likely to 
 cause.
 
 I do find this witch-hunt against capacitors to be curious, given how few 
 I've found to have 
 failed. I suspect a lot of it comes from audiophools who think this is the 
 way to fix anything...

This is something Tony and I are quite in agreement on.

Similar to Tony, (and as mentioned in discussion on this topic a couple of 
months ago): in the solid-state category, of the many pieces of 1960s  70s and 
later equipment I have or have serviced, the vast majority are running with 
their original capacitors.

If you're dealing with a 1936 or 1952 tube radio, a knee-jerk replace the 
capacitors is warranted.
If you're dealing with a 1970s computer, it isn't (IMHO). Esp. when they're 
screw-terminal 'computer-grade' caps.

My own perception of the concern is that it has been perpetuated over the years 
from the vacuum tube / antique radio arena. The issue of capacitors drying 
out dates from the days (1920s,early 30s) when electrolytics actually were 
filled with an active liquid which actually did dry up.
Dry electrolytics were developed in the 1930s, and while early dry 
electrolytics also warrant replacement, the chemistry and techniques have seen 
a few improvements in the many intervening years, and solid-state equipment is 
not placing the same stresses on caps as tube equipment.

In other arenas it's a real issue, in a modern arena it is largely lore.

The point of electrolytic caps is to form an oxide to be the dielectric, formed 
(in part) out of the electrolyte, and while I'm no expert on the chemistry, I 
will point out the oxidised state is 'the' or 'a' low energy state, and hence 
relatively stable. Rust doesn't normally undo itself.



Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread Jay Jaeger
That might be a little different -- much more recent - presumably in the
ear of flat screens and PCs where there have been times when
manufacturers got fed bad capacitors for their boards - which then
failed later.  IBM replaced a whole series of motherboards in one
organization that I worked at because of that (though those were not
power supply capacitors.)

On 7/17/2015 1:53 PM, Mouse wrote:
 I do find this witch-hunt against capacitors to be curious, given how
 few I've found to have failed.  I suspect a lot of it comes from
 audiophools who think this is the way to fix anything...
 
 Perhaps.  But not all of it, certainly.  I'm currently four for four
 fixing dead flatscreens by re-capping their power supplies; I imagine
 others have similar experiences.  It's not a huge stretch to imagine
 that other power supplies may have similar issues; even if it turns out
 to not be the case, there is probably at least a little can't hurt
 anything, right? running around.
 
 /~\ The ASCII   Mouse
 \ / Ribbon Campaign
  X  Against HTML  mo...@rodents-montreal.org
 / \ Email! 7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39  4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B
 


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread Jay Jaeger
I tend to agree with your hunch.

On 7/17/2015 1:55 PM, Todd Killingsworth wrote:
 I suspect part of the swap'em ALL out mentality comes from the 90's when
 some botched industrial espionage had some of the bottom-tier cap
 manufacturers using a dodgy electrolytic formula for their caps.  These
 caps would have a frequent failure rate..
 
 While not an issue for pre-90's electronics,  it has fostered the mentality
 of full replacement for 'newer' electronics i.e. arcade/pinball machines
 
 Todd Killingsworth
 
 On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 2:42 PM, tony duell a...@p850ug1.demon.co.uk wrote:
 

 It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
 supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
 load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.

 It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power
 supplies.

 Could you, please, explain why? And how often should this be done? Every
 week, every month, every year, or what?

 FWIW, the number PSU elecrtrolytics I have replaced can be counted on the
 fingers of
 one hand -- in unary. Well, perhaps both hands. But it's 1% of all the
 PSU electrolytic
 capacitors I own.

 Only 2 cases spring to mind :

 The PSU in my 11/44 had a high ESR capacitor on the +36V rail (all other
 caps in the machine
 were fine)

 I changed the 2 mains smoothing capacitors in my HP120 not because they
 were electrically
 defective (they tested fine) but because one was bulging a little on top
 and had it exploded it would
 have hit the neck of the CRT with all the problems that would be likely to
 cause.

 I do find this witch-hunt against capacitors to be curious, given how few
 I've found to have
 failed. I suspect a lot of it comes from audiophools who think this is the
 way to fix anything...

 -tony

 


Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread devin davison
Thank you for the detailed information. I need to figure out how im going
to get it out of the rack and moved to a place where i can test it over the
next couple days where it will not be in the way.  Ill find some way to do
a dummy load and do an extended test to be sure the supply is working
properly. All fingers crossed, god it better not have damaged any of the
boards, i do not know where i would get replacements.It took years for me
to get the machine, who knows how long it would take to find a specific
board that is bad. I did buy an oscillicope and a logic analyzer well in
advance in preparation for getting this machine, however short of pressing
the power button no clue how to use them or basic troubleshooting
procedures. Guess i just have to learn by doing

On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 3:23 PM, tony duell a...@p850ug1.demon.co.uk wrote:


  When I repaired my VT100s I had to replace all the electrolytic caps on
 the
  monitor control board to cure the screen wobble. Before doing so I had
  reformed them all and I had tested them all for ESR and they had all
 tested
  fine so I was unable to determine which of them was the bad one. Perhaps
  there is other more professional test equipment I could use that would
 have
  helped, I don't know. I did keep all the original caps though
 (somewhere).

 Are you saying that if you put any of the original capacitors back
 (leaving new
 ones in all other locations) you get screen wobble. If so, I am not sure I
 believe you. It's been some years since I repaired a VT100, but from what I
 remember there are plenty of capacitors that simply could not cause
 screen wobble no matter what they were doing.

 Or did you recap the board and find that it then worked. In which case (a)
 perhaps only one of the capacitors was faulty or (b) it was actually a dry
 joint.

 -tony



Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread devin davison
I was operating the panel when i first got it, now the numbers do not light
up, panel is unresponsive, and run light stays lit.(just describing the
behavior, i will not start it back up till I work on the power supply)

On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 3:50 PM, devin davison lyokob...@gmail.com wrote:

 I had to do some cap replacement on some older Motorola tube radios,I have
 some basic soldering skills. I was under the impression that the capacitors
 in computer equipment this big from this year would have been of better
 quality and it would not be an issue.

 I have someone scheduled to come out tonight after i get off work and get
 it out of the rack.

 On Fri, Jul 17, 2015 at 3:45 PM, Brent Hilpert hilp...@cs.ubc.ca wrote:

 On 2015-Jul-17, at 11:42 AM, tony duell wrote:
  It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in
 power
  supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
  load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.
 
  It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power
 supplies.
 
  Could you, please, explain why? And how often should this be done? Every
  week, every month, every year, or what?
 
  FWIW, the number PSU elecrtrolytics I have replaced can be counted on
 the fingers of
  one hand -- in unary. Well, perhaps both hands. But it's 1% of all the
 PSU electrolytic
  capacitors I own.
 
  Only 2 cases spring to mind :
 
  The PSU in my 11/44 had a high ESR capacitor on the +36V rail (all
 other caps in the machine
  were fine)
 
  I changed the 2 mains smoothing capacitors in my HP120 not because they
 were electrically
  defective (they tested fine) but because one was bulging a little on
 top and had it exploded it would
  have hit the neck of the CRT with all the problems that would be likely
 to cause.
 
  I do find this witch-hunt against capacitors to be curious, given how
 few I've found to have
  failed. I suspect a lot of it comes from audiophools who think this is
 the way to fix anything...

 This is something Tony and I are quite in agreement on.

 Similar to Tony, (and as mentioned in discussion on this topic a couple
 of months ago): in the solid-state category, of the many pieces of 1960s 
 70s and later equipment I have or have serviced, the vast majority are
 running with their original capacitors.

 If you're dealing with a 1936 or 1952 tube radio, a knee-jerk replace
 the capacitors is warranted.
 If you're dealing with a 1970s computer, it isn't (IMHO). Esp. when
 they're screw-terminal 'computer-grade' caps.

 My own perception of the concern is that it has been perpetuated over the
 years from the vacuum tube / antique radio arena. The issue of capacitors
 drying out dates from the days (1920s,early 30s) when electrolytics
 actually were filled with an active liquid which actually did dry up.
 Dry electrolytics were developed in the 1930s, and while early dry
 electrolytics also warrant replacement, the chemistry and techniques have
 seen a few improvements in the many intervening years, and solid-state
 equipment is not placing the same stresses on caps as tube equipment.

 In other arenas it's a real issue, in a modern arena it is largely lore.

 The point of electrolytic caps is to form an oxide to be the dielectric,
 formed (in part) out of the electrolyte, and while I'm no expert on the
 chemistry, I will point out the oxidised state is 'the' or 'a' low energy
 state, and hence relatively stable. Rust doesn't normally undo itself.





Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread John Robertson

On 07/17/2015 11:53 AM, Mouse wrote:

I do find this witch-hunt against capacitors to be curious, given how
few I've found to have failed.  I suspect a lot of it comes from
audiophools who think this is the way to fix anything...

Perhaps.  But not all of it, certainly.  I'm currently four for four
fixing dead flatscreens by re-capping their power supplies; I imagine
others have similar experiences.  It's not a huge stretch to imagine
that other power supplies may have similar issues; even if it turns out
to not be the case, there is probably at least a little can't hurt
anything, right? running around.

/~\ The ASCII Mouse
\ / Ribbon Campaign
  X  Against HTML   mo...@rodents-montreal.org
/ \ Email!   7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39  4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B



This is not surprising given the vintages of the machines. Modern 
machines using switching power supplies (15kHz+) must have capacitors 
with low ESR and high capacity to run properly.


Older linear power supplies ran at 50/60hz and as such the capacitors 
had much less ripple current (and low frequency to boot) to deal with 
and the engineers typically over designed the values of capacitors to 
allow for some degradation. The machines you are playing with cost 
fortunes back in the day - they HAD to be reliable as possible.


Modern caps run at or near their rated temperature (105C) last around 
1,000 to 5,000 hours. The old linear supplies rarely heated the caps 
much over 40C and thus the caps would last decades...I put fans on our 
LCD monitors in our games and they last just fine.


No fan? Expect a year or two at most before failure.

John :-#)#

--
John's Jukes Ltd. 2343 Main St., Vancouver, BC, Canada V5T 3C9
Call (604)872-5757 or Fax 872-2010 (Pinballs, Jukes, VideoGames)
 www.flippers.com
Old pinballers never die, they just flip out



Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread Jay Jaeger
U - his PDP-11/34 most certainly does use switching power
regulators.  ;)

On 7/17/2015 4:06 PM, John Robertson wrote:
 On 07/17/2015 11:53 AM, Mouse wrote:
 I do find this witch-hunt against capacitors to be curious, given how
 few I've found to have failed.  I suspect a lot of it comes from
 audiophools who think this is the way to fix anything...
 Perhaps.  But not all of it, certainly.  I'm currently four for four
 fixing dead flatscreens by re-capping their power supplies; I imagine
 others have similar experiences.  It's not a huge stretch to imagine
 that other power supplies may have similar issues; even if it turns out
 to not be the case, there is probably at least a little can't hurt
 anything, right? running around.

 /~\ The ASCII  Mouse
 \ / Ribbon Campaign
   X  Against HTMLmo...@rodents-montreal.org
 / \ Email! 7D C8 61 52 5D E7 2D 39  4E F1 31 3E E8 B3 27 4B

 
 This is not surprising given the vintages of the machines. Modern
 machines using switching power supplies (15kHz+) must have capacitors
 with low ESR and high capacity to run properly.
 
 Older linear power supplies ran at 50/60hz and as such the capacitors
 had much less ripple current (and low frequency to boot) to deal with
 and the engineers typically over designed the values of capacitors to
 allow for some degradation. The machines you are playing with cost
 fortunes back in the day - they HAD to be reliable as possible.
 
 Modern caps run at or near their rated temperature (105C) last around
 1,000 to 5,000 hours. The old linear supplies rarely heated the caps
 much over 40C and thus the caps would last decades...I put fans on our
 LCD monitors in our games and they last just fine.
 
 No fan? Expect a year or two at most before failure.
 
 John :-#)#
 


RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread Robert Jarratt


 -Original Message-
 From: cctalk [mailto:cctalk-boun...@classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of tony
duell
 Sent: 17 July 2015 20:23
 To: General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts
 Subject: RE: PDP 11 gear finally moved
 
 
  When I repaired my VT100s I had to replace all the electrolytic caps
  on the monitor control board to cure the screen wobble. Before doing
  so I had reformed them all and I had tested them all for ESR and they
  had all tested fine so I was unable to determine which of them was the
  bad one. Perhaps there is other more professional test equipment I
  could use that would have helped, I don't know. I did keep all the
original caps
 though (somewhere).
 
 Are you saying that if you put any of the original capacitors back
(leaving new
 ones in all other locations) you get screen wobble. If so, I am not sure I
believe
 you. It's been some years since I repaired a VT100, but from what I
remember
 there are plenty of capacitors that simply could not cause screen wobble
no
 matter what they were doing.
 
 Or did you recap the board and find that it then worked. In which case (a)
 perhaps only one of the capacitors was faulty or (b) it was actually a dry
joint.
 
 -tony
 =

I am saying that I recapped the entire board, so one or more of them must
have been bad. I agree it could have been a dry joint, but I am not going to
put them all back just to check :-) This happened on *two* of these boards,
so either I had two dry joints, or two bad caps.

Regards

Rob



Re: PDP 11 gear finally moved

2015-07-17 Thread Jay Jaeger
Replace - no, I don't agree - especially not for those of us who don't
have the kind of budget that your organization has.  In my experience,
for equipment of this quality and vintage, 95% or more of the time an
hour to a few hours of re-forming is all that is necessary - and as Tony
has pointed out, even that is not often really necessary.

JRJ

On 7/17/2015 1:33 PM, Rich Alderson wrote:
 It is generally a good idea to re-form electrolytic capacitors in power
 supplies, and to bench check the power supplies (under some kind of
 load) before actually applying power to the whole unit.
 
 It is always a good idea to replace electrolytic capacitors in power supplies.
 The rest of the advice is sound.
 
 Rich
 
 Rich Alderson
 Vintage Computing Sr. Systems Engineer
 Living Computer Museum
 2245 1st Avenue S
 Seattle, WA 98134
 
 mailto:ri...@livingcomputermuseum.org
 
 http://www.LivingComputerMuseum.org/