Gary C
Veteran Member
Next on the bench is a Grundy Newbrain
Circuit diagrams are here http://www.goffart.co.uk/museum/schematics/newbrain.pdf
PSU was powered up by one of the volunteers to a Big Bang and lots of RIFA smoke
The PSU is a simple transformer/rectifier with three transistors roughly regulating using Zeners as a voltage reference. RIFA removed (a chunky affair with three terminals as it actually contains three capacitors, between L&N and two to earth)
Unit powered up again and all three supplies present.
Opening up is a pain, lots and lots of screws to reveal three circuit boards. I can see why this was overpriced compared to say the Spectrum. Lots and lots of discrete logic, so much that the RAM can't fit on the motherboard and has to be farmed off to a daughterboard.
Plugged into the NB, and... No 5v
The regulation uses an OPAMP and a precision voltage source, using the amp as a basic proportional controller. +5v rises above the reference which tends to lower the output of the op amp which reduces the bias on the regulator transistor which reduces the +5V.
Voltage on the reference should be 2.45V but is 1.2V ?
This machine has a slight modification over the drawing and has a the 8V DC then a 100ohm resistor then a 1.2k resistor then the reference, oddly the 100ohm resistor was dropping about 7v across it and the 1.2k resistor only about 0.2v which means they cannot have the same current flowing through them. Simple fault, the capacitor to 0V has failed with a low resistance to 0v so much so that the reference isn't getting enough to operate. Cap replaced and gunk wiped of and voltage restored.
I'm not a fan of 'Recapping' but looking at the electrolytic on this board, they are all leaking, so next job is replacement.
Circuit diagrams are here http://www.goffart.co.uk/museum/schematics/newbrain.pdf
PSU was powered up by one of the volunteers to a Big Bang and lots of RIFA smoke
The PSU is a simple transformer/rectifier with three transistors roughly regulating using Zeners as a voltage reference. RIFA removed (a chunky affair with three terminals as it actually contains three capacitors, between L&N and two to earth)
Unit powered up again and all three supplies present.
Opening up is a pain, lots and lots of screws to reveal three circuit boards. I can see why this was overpriced compared to say the Spectrum. Lots and lots of discrete logic, so much that the RAM can't fit on the motherboard and has to be farmed off to a daughterboard.
Plugged into the NB, and... No 5v
The regulation uses an OPAMP and a precision voltage source, using the amp as a basic proportional controller. +5v rises above the reference which tends to lower the output of the op amp which reduces the bias on the regulator transistor which reduces the +5V.
Voltage on the reference should be 2.45V but is 1.2V ?
This machine has a slight modification over the drawing and has a the 8V DC then a 100ohm resistor then a 1.2k resistor then the reference, oddly the 100ohm resistor was dropping about 7v across it and the 1.2k resistor only about 0.2v which means they cannot have the same current flowing through them. Simple fault, the capacitor to 0V has failed with a low resistance to 0v so much so that the reference isn't getting enough to operate. Cap replaced and gunk wiped of and voltage restored.
I'm not a fan of 'Recapping' but looking at the electrolytic on this board, they are all leaking, so next job is replacement.