Upon inspection of the control logic board I found that an engineering change was made to this board, adding one jumper wire and one 470 ohm resistor. The resistor was broken in half. I didn't have that value on hand but once I picked one up I could repair the board.
Broken resistor on control logic board (05) |
Resistor replaced on Control Logic Board |
I had to build a replacement for the configuration "chip" that plugs into the socket for U27 on the capstan pre-amp board. It houses five resistors and two capacitors of specific ratings for the 125 inch per second capstan speed:
- 3.6K
- 39.2K
- 2.94K
- 4.12K
- 6.8K
- .01 uf
- .027 uf
I collected these components at Anchor Electronics and soldered them onto a IC socket that will plug into the socket below it on the PCB. Everything was going well, verifying the values with my capacitor and ohm meters, when I realized that I had bought an .022 capacitor, not the intended .027 uf.
I had to drive out to the store again just to buy the ten cent part I had miswritten on the sheet, having transcribed my sloppy handwriting incorrectly. After the wasted 45 minutes I completed the DIP socket with the proper configuration components and had it plugged into the PCB.
With this installed, the board is complete and configured for the high speed model 6 behavior. Between the broken resistor for the control logic board fix and these parts, including a second try at the .027 capacitor, my bill was just over $4.
Configuration block for 125 ips on Capstan Pre-amp PCB |
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