DISCONNECTED MOTORWIRING AND ONE REMAINING WIRE
The wiring to the motor was hooked up on a terminal block on the top compartment of the machine (M Terminal Block), allowing me to disconnect the cable there and pull it down to the lower compartment. There was also a wire coming from a relay RY1 inside connected to another wire that delivers 24VDC to the logic gate. They were soldered together and wrapped with electrical tape, so I had to cut the solder joint to free up the wire.
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Cables and wires removed from machine so PS box can be moved |
PS BOX REMOVED FROM THE 2501 READER
I lifted the PS box out of the lower compartment and transported it on my lift table. I then placed it on the workbench to begin checking out components.
CHECKED VARIOUS COMPONENTS FOR SHORTS AND PROPER VALUES
I began testing different components that might have failed either by shorting or having their values change so drastically that it could cause damage when power is applied. Among the parts I tested were:
- Diodes used for half-wave rectifiers to produce 24V and 2.5V
- Large capacitors used for filtering as well as ferro-resonant transformer operation
- Transformer winding shorts or opens
As is typical with IBM mainframe produces from the 1960s, the parts were high quality and very rarely fail or drift too much. All the capacitors worked to spec. Nothing was shorted or open.
CLEANING CONTACTS ON RELAYS AND SWITCHES
What does tend to fail as these systems sit unused for decades are contacts on relays and switches, which form a layer of oxidation which is an insulator. Deoxit spray and work with a burnishing tool returns them to good working order.
I cleaned the contacts on relays K4 and RY1, using a VOM to verify good conductivity and reliable switching.
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Coil connections in green, one set of contacts used in yellow |
Although relay K4 is complex, a 4 pole double throw relay, only a single pole and contact are wired in.
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Relay RY1 |
USING FUSES TO ISOLATE SECTIONS AS I APPLY 240VAC
The power supply employs five fuses, which I can take out to isolate the sections of the circuits they feed. Fuse F1 controls the 2.5VDC that powers the lamp for the photocell that detects cards in the pre-read station. Fuses F2A and F2B feed the primary of the main transformer which generates the 24VDC, 2.5VDC and 6VAC. Fuses F3A and F3B feed the motor power through a line filter and contactor K1.
The usage meter power supply does not have a fuse in the circuit, so it is always powered as long as the CE Switch is in the normal position. The fuses interact for certain functionality - the 2.5VDC requires fuses F2A, F2B and F1 to all be working. The motor is fed by F3A and F3B but the contactor K1 is activated by the 24V that comes from the power supply, thus fuses F2A and F2B must be working for the motor to work.
I have a step up transformer at the bench which I used for convenience rather than hooking the PS box up to 240V directly. This cannot handle the load of the motor but is sufficient to test out power supply sections.
METER SUPPLY WORKING PROPERLY
I switched the connections for the primary to feed the meter power supply transformer for the 240V present in my shop. I will set it back to 208V when it is ready to ship to the system owner whose facility is powered by 208V.
I validated that the supply produces 41VAC. It will switch on when appropriate logic signals come from the controller in the 1130 - one wire brings +6V for the relay coil and the other is pulled to ground to activate the relay. This feeds the 41VAC out to the usage meter in the top compartment of the 2501.
POWER SUPPLY SECTIONS WORKING PROPERLY
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NEED TO WORK OUT WIRING OF TRANSFORMER PRIMARY FOR 230 VS 208
There is a discrepancy in the wiring diagram between the European version and the US version. The schematics I have show four terminals that allow selection of 195, 220 or 235 V mains voltage. Relay RY1 is wired across terminals 1 and 4 in the diagram.
However, the actual wiring of terminal block PSTB1 doesn't match that and doesn't make sense. There is a metal jumper between terminals 2 and 3. RY1 is wired between terminals 1 and 5 in the US version. Thus I can't make changes to convert this to 240V until I can reconcile the differences.
The transformer is a ferro-resonant type, which uses a capacitor you can see at the bottom of the picture just above to achieve resonance at the mains line frequency. This saturates the core of the transformer, thus variations in input voltage produce almost no swing in output voltages. This is a form of voltage regulation that IBM often uses.
Multi-tap transformers for US machines use a different scheme to select voltages, usually involving jumpers as well as moving the input wires to specific terminals. Here is a diagram from another transformer in a US machine that shows how jumpers and wiring changes are used:
As you can see, this doesn't match our terminal block either, since there is a jumper between terminals 2 and 3 on our machine but those would be used to supply the input line voltage per the two diagrams above. I thus have to figure out how the actual wiring I see for PSTB1 would map to 208V and then work out how to change it to select 230V.
NEXT UP IS WORKING ON MOTOR CONTROL CIRCUITS
The motor control circuits involve several relays and a main contactor K1 to switch the power on to the motor. The motor has start windings that depend on a phase shift relative to the main winding to achieve initial rotation, provided by an RC network that is switched out by relay K2 once the motor achieves speed.
The 2501 card reader will start up the motor when it needs to read or feed cards, using contactor K1. A timer circuit turns off the motor after approximately 15 seconds, unless another feed or read request arrives to reset the timer. Relay K3 is the time delay relay which sends a signal -Motor Hold back to the controller logic. Relay K4 is activated by the -Execute signal when a new read or feed is requested, and acts to reset the timer for K3.
I will have to clean and verify the contacts on relays K1 and K3, having already cleaned up K4. K2 is a sealed unit providing motor startup functionality and should be safe from oxidation.
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K3 at top, K2 at bottom |