Re: [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

2020-08-02 Thread Chris Fezzler
 Correct.  Now examining PCB with magnifying glass and continuity tester to 
inspect circuit line that may look broken or brownish as earlier described as 
evidence of corrosion.
Common sense, patience and willingness hoping for dumb luck.
Never surrender!
On Sunday, August 2, 2020, 05:58:35 PM EDT, Jeffrey Birt 
 wrote:  
 
 
So the screen/kb from the unit you were working on worked fine on the other 
M100? (Just making sure.)

  

Jeff Birt

  

From: M100  On Behalf Of Chris Fezzler
Sent: Sunday, August 2, 2020 2:51 PM
To: m...@bitchin100.com
Subject: Re: [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

  

Thanks.  Dug out another Model T and swapped screens and keyboard.

They worked flawlessly as suspected.

So the LCD and keyboard side of the equation has been eliminated.

  

On Sunday, August 2, 2020, 08:34:22 AM EDT, Jeffrey Birt 
 wrote: 

  

  

If you look close you can just see a green trace under that block of solder so 
it looks like those two pins would be electrically joined anyhow. Sometimes 
this PCBs had messy solder joints from the factory. Probably the most common 
issue is a poor connection from the solder not flowing out properly originally 
and then developing cracks over time. 

 

Ideally the solder forms a tent like shape around the pin and flows down 
smoothly to the pad. A joint that did not have enough solder or that was not 
soldered properly will look more like a blob, there will not be a nice smooth 
transition from pin to pad. The where the solder meets the pad it tends to tuck 
back under itself rather than flowing out. If you look up at pin 40 in the 
picture you can see that is more of ball. This is probably a case of just too 
much solder there. Often times I will put some flux on joints like that and 
reflow them.

 

It can be tough to find bad solder joints. Sometimes the cracks are obvious 
under magnification and sometimes they are not.

 

Jeff Birt

 

From: M100  On Behalf Of Chris Fezzler
Sent: Saturday, August 1, 2020 11:36 PM
To: M100 Mailing List 
Subject: [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

 

Please look at the PCB pic here.  It is of the option rom socket from the 
component side.

 

Those to points are not supposed to be soldered together, are they?

 

My LCD issue may be related if they are not.

 

 
  

Re: [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

2020-08-02 Thread Jeffrey Birt
So the screen/kb from the unit you were working on worked fine on the other 
M100? (Just making sure.)

 

Jeff Birt

 

From: M100  On Behalf Of Chris Fezzler
Sent: Sunday, August 2, 2020 2:51 PM
To: m...@bitchin100.com
Subject: Re: [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

 

Thanks.  Dug out another Model T and swapped screens and keyboard.

They worked flawlessly as suspected.

So the LCD and keyboard side of the equation has been eliminated.

 

On Sunday, August 2, 2020, 08:34:22 AM EDT, Jeffrey Birt mailto:bir...@soigeneris.com> > wrote: 

 

 

If you look close you can just see a green trace under that block of solder so 
it looks like those two pins would be electrically joined anyhow. Sometimes 
this PCBs had messy solder joints from the factory. Probably the most common 
issue is a poor connection from the solder not flowing out properly originally 
and then developing cracks over time. 

 

Ideally the solder forms a tent like shape around the pin and flows down 
smoothly to the pad. A joint that did not have enough solder or that was not 
soldered properly will look more like a blob, there will not be a nice smooth 
transition from pin to pad. The where the solder meets the pad it tends to tuck 
back under itself rather than flowing out. If you look up at pin 40 in the 
picture you can see that is more of ball. This is probably a case of just too 
much solder there. Often times I will put some flux on joints like that and 
reflow them.

 

It can be tough to find bad solder joints. Sometimes the cracks are obvious 
under magnification and sometimes they are not.

 

Jeff Birt

 

From: M100 mailto:m100-boun...@lists.bitchin100.com> > On Behalf Of Chris Fezzler
Sent: Saturday, August 1, 2020 11:36 PM
To: M100 Mailing List mailto:m...@bitchin100.com> >
Subject: [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

 

Please look at the PCB pic here.  It is of the option rom socket from the 
component side.

 

Those to points are not supposed to be soldered together, are they?

 

My LCD issue may be related if they are not.

 

 



Re: [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

2020-08-02 Thread Chris Fezzler
 Thanks.  Dug out another Model T and swapped screens and keyboard.They worked 
flawlessly as suspected.So the LCD and keyboard side of the equation has been 
eliminated.
On Sunday, August 2, 2020, 08:34:22 AM EDT, Jeffrey Birt 
 wrote:  
 
 
If you look close you can just see a green trace under that block of solder so 
it looks like those two pins would be electrically joined anyhow. Sometimes 
this PCBs had messy solder joints from the factory. Probably the most common 
issue is a poor connection from the solder not flowing out properly originally 
and then developing cracks over time. 

  

Ideally the solder forms a tent like shape around the pin and flows down 
smoothly to the pad. A joint that did not have enough solder or that was not 
soldered properly will look more like a blob, there will not be a nice smooth 
transition from pin to pad. The where the solder meets the pad it tends to tuck 
back under itself rather than flowing out. If you look up at pin 40 in the 
picture you can see that is more of ball. This is probably a case of just too 
much solder there. Often times I will put some flux on joints like that and 
reflow them.

  

It can be tough to find bad solder joints. Sometimes the cracks are obvious 
under magnification and sometimes they are not.

  

Jeff Birt

  

From: M100  On Behalf Of Chris Fezzler
Sent: Saturday, August 1, 2020 11:36 PM
To: M100 Mailing List 
Subject: [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

  

Please look at the PCB pic here.  It is of the option rom socket from the 
component side.

  

Those to points are not supposed to be soldered together, are they?

  

My LCD issue may be related if they are not.

  

  
  

Re: [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

2020-08-02 Thread B4 Me100
Unfortunately that is a pretty typical solder joint for an M100 it is OK.

One thing you might want to look for is corrosion caused by flux residue
that was left behind after the manufacturing process.  It looks like a
copper brown deposit but might hide a damaged track.  I have worked on a few
Mobos where the track has tested open circuit or very high resistance due to
the residual flux corroding the track over time.  Look particularly around
the OPTROM socket or ROM socket where flux could collect after a Œbad¹
wash.  Quite a lot of the tracks to the PIO are routed under the flash
socket if they are bad then the PIO might not be working properly which will
impact most of the board.

It could also be a failed component which after 35years would not be
unreasonable.  Some output stuck high or low can cause issues elsewhere that
can be misleading. 

From:  M100  on behalf of Chris Fezzler

Reply-To:  "m...@bitchin100.com" 
Date:  Saturday, August 1, 2020 at 9:35 PM
To:  M100 Mailing List 
Subject:  [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

> Please look at the PCB pic here.  It is of the option rom socket from the
> component side.
> 
> Those to points are not supposed to be soldered together, are they?
> 
> My LCD issue may be related if they are not.
> 
> 




Re: [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

2020-08-02 Thread Jeffrey Birt
If you look close you can just see a green trace under that block of solder so 
it looks like those two pins would be electrically joined anyhow. Sometimes 
this PCBs had messy solder joints from the factory. Probably the most common 
issue is a poor connection from the solder not flowing out properly originally 
and then developing cracks over time. 

 

Ideally the solder forms a tent like shape around the pin and flows down 
smoothly to the pad. A joint that did not have enough solder or that was not 
soldered properly will look more like a blob, there will not be a nice smooth 
transition from pin to pad. The where the solder meets the pad it tends to tuck 
back under itself rather than flowing out. If you look up at pin 40 in the 
picture you can see that is more of ball. This is probably a case of just too 
much solder there. Often times I will put some flux on joints like that and 
reflow them.

 

It can be tough to find bad solder joints. Sometimes the cracks are obvious 
under magnification and sometimes they are not.

 

Jeff Birt

 

From: M100  On Behalf Of Chris Fezzler
Sent: Saturday, August 1, 2020 11:36 PM
To: M100 Mailing List 
Subject: [M100] Narrowing down issue, I think

 

Please look at the PCB pic here.  It is of the option rom socket from the 
component side.

 

Those to points are not supposed to be soldered together, are they?

 

My LCD issue may be related if they are not.