On Wed, 29 Dec 2004, David Pinckney wrote:
> Yes i did check all cables, i'm pretty sure its a deflection board problem,
> somebody gave me a link to Go5 faq's and it says that in x y circuits some
> transistors can meter good but in fact be bad, so it might pay me just to
I wouldn't worry about that, it isn't at all common for that to happen. I
would read the FAQ again though. Maybe a few times.
I very much doubt you have a transistor problem. The deflection transistors
are used in pairs. For each axis, there is a transistor for positive
deflection and one for negative. To loose all Y delfection at once, both
transistors would have to die at the same time, which doesn't usually
happen.
It is far more likely there is an inturruption in the Y signal someplace, so
I would again check the cable, the Y pin going to the board. Again, the
simpelest thing is to use a scope and make sure you have a signal at the
input to the board, then trace the signal path and see where it disappears.
If you don't have a scope, 1) Get one, it will make Vector game ownership
that much easier. 2) A logic probe is cheaper and may work in this case.
Personally I've never found them usefull, but others swear by them. 3) Page
21 of the FAQ has a voltage table for all transistors when the test pattern
is up on the screen.
The problem with shotgunning these old boards is you increase the chance of
lifting a trace and causeing a new problem for yourself. You know the
problem -- no Y signal. The easiest thing is to start where you know there
is signal, follow the path, and see where it stops.
==========================================================
Chris Candreva -- chris@westnet.com -- (914) 967-7816
WestNet Internet Services of Westchester
http://www.westnet.com/
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Received on Wed Dec 29 12:45:08 2004
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