The symptoms are as follows. As soon as you apply power, all 8 DIAG LED come on immediately and stay on. Nothing on the serial port. Nothing changes when you press reset (those 8 DIAG led stay on all the time).
Next I used a big 33 amp capable bench supply I have to supply power. I tried this with only +5 connected. It did not work, but I measured the 5 volt rail at several TTL chips on the board at 4.4 volts. I carefully (and in steps) increased the voltage on the Sorensen bench supply to 5.6 volts and the 3-160 began working. I saw a normal pattern on the DIAG led! I measure 4.84 volts on those TTL chips. This was yesterday.
Today I decided to continue using the bench supply with that 5.6 volt setting. I have only one wire carrying the 12 amps the board pulls, which accounts for the loss. This time I also turn on the 10 amp supply from yesterday, which is still connected to -12 and +12. I figured that the big supply can provide the 12 amps of 5 volts and the smaller supply can give us the +12 and -12.
Shortly after I turn things on, I smell the "burned electronics" smell. It is not clear just what happened.
I check voltages on the board and still measure 4.84 on Vcc.
I check the +12 and =12 at my supply connector, +12 is fine, but -12 is pulled down to 0.5 volts or something of that sort.
I move the board to a Sun pizzabox that I verify will run my other 3-160 board properly, and indeed the board is dead.
I check the 10 amp power supply that I used to give -12 and +12 and all voltages measure just fine -- 5, 12, and -12.
When the 3-160 was still connected, I measured a good +12, but the -12 was pulled down to something less that 1 volt.
+5 to A32, B32, C32 +5 return to A9 +12 to C31 -12 to A31 +-12 return to C9Closer look at the 3-160 schematics show the VME connections on page 26. It shows A31 is unconnected!
The schematic shows a supply "-5TRK" that is supplied to the AM26LS29 drivers used for RS232. This comes from pins on the P3 connector that I never connected anything to. So it looks like the RS232 drivers worked from -5 to +5 not -12 to +12.
Could not supplying -5 have caused damage? Note that I found the -12 supply (supposedly not connected) was pulled down. I should check this pin on the board with a meter. Maybe they connected this n/c pin to ground.
Maybe schematics for other boards (like the 3/260) might show some details regarding power. Maybe the run serial from -5 to +12 -- I could check this with an oscilloscope.
I am recording all this, because I intend to simply set the board aside and continue the bootrom work using my working 3-160 board, but abandon my home made frame and power supply. Someday I may find time and inclination to try to repair this board.
Tom's Computer Info / tom@mmto.org