Oh NO
I hope you marked the original setting.
Setting a pot will not repair the PSU.
Don't worry :) I marked it carefully, and reset it after I was done. I
didn't touch the other pot. That's why I asked, instead of just messing with
it and blowing up the system. I've blown up enough electron
Hi Jason,
we have here in europe sunday 8 p.m. now and I have a little more time to
type in some hints for your non-working switching power-supply.
You wrote:
> The +5v wire has 0.7v
> The +12v wire has 7.2v
> The -12v line has -4.3v
If you already opened the PSU and checked the voltage with the
Speaking of which, there's a power supply on ebay. Doesn't say if it's a
1.2 or 1.8A model, and the auction will close in 10h, so you might want to
ask the seller quickly. :-)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=51046&item=5142326481&rd=1
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The Lisa Office System's Desktop Manager ("finder") copying methodology was
to always _MOVE_ a document whenever you copied it. To make a copy
(duplicate) you used the Duplicate command (it may have been called Make
Duplicate but that sounds too wordy to me).
This made "copying" very consistent in
Oh NO
I hope you marked the original setting.
Setting a pot will not repair the PSU.
Now we will have to adjust the PSU again, too.
First we should get it repaired, don't you think so
DO NOT SET THE OTHER POT. IT's OVERCURREN SETTING !!
TOM from Bavaria
>
> The pot (r11) was set at
Hi Jason,
it's very likely the PSU itself.
Check the PSU with shortcut of PIN 20 (component side) and at the same
position below X (bottom side) of the PSU board.
These two connectors have to be shortcut; that's the trick to get the PSU
work in stand-alone-mode
Measure PIN 13up to18 = Ground
with