On Thu, 10 Mar 2016 14:23:34 +0100, Peter Coghlan <cct...@beyondthepale.ie> wrote:


FWIW, here's a thermography (hope the link works) of the B-cache section of the KA-675 after being powered up for ca. 30 mins: https://www.dropbox.com/s/2nsx1dfngp1jfq5/TH710065.BMP?dl=0

Note that the rightmost chip just below the CPU heatsink has a pin that's ca. 2 degrees warmer than the others. I don't know if that says anything, but it *is* reproducible. Maybe I should start with that one.


I can't really make it out on the image but if it is just one pin that is
hot, maybe there is nothing more complicated wrong than a bad solder joint
at that pin, particularly if it is a power or ground pin.

Hi Peter,

I've already reworked that pin, but to no avail. :^(

I've converted the pic to grayscale for better contrast and highlighted the pin in red:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/ss76hldqxziazyc/ka-675-1.png?dl=0

For comparison, here's a thermograph of the 2nd KA-675 with the dead DSSI controller:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/8twvrytrr60mrb9/ka-675-2.jpg?dl=0

The artefact doesn't show up on the 2nd board. Might be a long shot tho. I'm not sure a chip failure would even show here. This was more of a lame experiment, since we have the thermal tracer in the lab anyway (and the pix look cool).

--GT


--
"END OF LINE" [MCP, 1982]
"... nowhere in the standards is it specified that 'programs that use a lot of memory may randomly crash at any time for no apparent reason'" [Stackoverflow forum, 2012]

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