On Fri, 08 Mar 2013 23:30:37 +0000, me <m...@example.invalid> wrote:
>On Fri, 08 Mar 2013 23:15:29 +0000,
mail...@btinternet.com wrote:
>
>>I wonder if there are any owners of any of these two machines here
>>with an interest in sharing knowledge and experiences.
>>
>>I have very recently been fortunate to acquire an example of each of
>>them and both are in working order; the Nascom just needing the video
>>'snow-plough' modification.
>>
>
>I have a Nascom 2 (home built) so what is the snow plough modification and
>where can I find out more details please.
>
>The actual Nascom has not been powered up in 15 years so the state of the
>rather large capacitors in the power supply is unknown. Can anyone comment
>on these capacitors shelf life when left un powered up for years ?
>
>Regards David
David,
It's good to meet up with another owner; perhaps there are more here.
The problem is described here
http://nascom.wordpress.com/nascom/video/
The snow-dinger mentioned for the Nascom 1 is here; it gives a good
technical description of the problem and that particular solution.
http://www.80bus.co.uk/publications/magazines/Micropower-1-1.pdf
I'll locate the Nascom2 solution another time.
Regarding electrolytics they can be perfectly alright. I am working on
a restoration project that has a considerable number of large Farnell
and Weir SMPS - they had not been switched on since 1989. On the very
first one that we tested there was a small puff of smoke; that turned
out to be small Rifa paper capacitors and on inspection were found to
be cracked on most supplies so we replaced them. We took a risk and
were lucky, even the 5V 150A supplies are now powered up, on load and
not one electrolytic has failed.
I'll say more about the project another time but you can start to
build the picture from
http://www.BMPG.org.uk . It does involve more
vintage computers!
Mike