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Been awhile for me; I've worked with 950s while at Centralia Community in the late 80s and had a 925 of my own - still wish I had it.
First off, if you happen to be unfamiliar with working safely with monitor or high-voltage electronics, I would strongly discourage opening the case up in the first place; monitor voltages (especially lingering charges on the picture tube and flyback) are nothing to mess with.
If the power supply is switching, putting it on a Variac would probably be a bad idea (I've learned firsthand with an Apple IIc monitor during that era that switching power supplies don't take well to slowly increasing voltages - linear power supplies are usually okay with it).
The idea of disconnecting the power supply from the terminal
electronics and then checking it with a multi-meter might tell you
if it works, but it will not tell you if there are any shorted
caps or other faults on the terminal or monitor electronics.
Also, if it is a switching power supply, it usually
requires a load to operate without damaging itself.
Visually inspecting the caps to make sure they are not bulging or
leaking before powering up might be worth considering.
OR - You might take one and simply plug it in on a surge suppressor or (if you have one) an isolation transformer (either should have an in-line breaker) and then turn it on - best done in a safe location like in a garage or some other highly-ventable place, just in case the magic smoke suddenly escapes.
That is all I can really think of for this. If anyone else has better suggestions, I really hope they step forth and offer it. :-)
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Been awhile for me; I've worked with 950s while at Centralia
Community in the late 80s and had a 925 of my own - still wish I
had it. So my suggestions should be taken with a grain of
salt... ;-)
First off, if someone is unfamiliar with working safely with monitor or high-voltage electronics, I would strongly discourage opening the case up in the first place; monitor voltages (especially lingering charges on the picture tube and flyback) are nothing to mess with.
If the power supply is switching, putting it on a Variac and turning it up slowly would probably be a bad idea (I've learned firsthand with an Apple IIc monitor during that era that switching power supplies don't take well to slowly increasing voltages - linear power supplies are usually okay with it).
The idea of disconnecting the power supply from the terminal
electronics and then checking it with a multi-meter might tell you
if the P/S is okay, but it will not tell you if there are any
shorted caps or other faults on the terminal or monitor
electronics. I've seen Adrian Black check the impedance on the
power inputs to the boards to look for such shorts as a start, and
then check individual components, especially tantalum or refer
caps (they tend to fail more spectacularly than most - Bang!).
Also, if it is a switching power supply, it will usually
require a load to operate without damaging itself.
Visually inspecting the caps to make sure they are not bulging or
leaking before powering up is something to consider.
- OR -
You might take one and simply plug it in on a surge suppressor or (if you have one) an isolation transformer (either should have an in-line breaker) and then turn it on - best done in a safe location like in a garage or some other highly-ventable place, just in case the magic smoke suddenly escapes.
That is all I can really think to suggest. If anyone else has
better suggestions, I really hope they step forth and offer it.
:-)
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/seattle-retrocomp/CAF-jDGyB%3DvM8Hfii%3Df_z3FWN64YD09zyqvH3nU-mpWxbD3hjig%40mail.gmail.com.
I should have been more specific: switching power supplies don't take well to slowly increasing voltages from zero to line voltage. They prefer the line voltage snapped on immediately. I had a regulator transistor go *pop* on me while trying a variac on the Apple monitor... ;-)
Admittedly beyond that, I've never been up to speed on how switching power supplies work. In contrast, I know linear power supplies inside and out (I suspect most people smarter than myself do). Back in my university days, my California Computer Systems 2200 had a unregulated linear power supply that was simple to work on (regulation was done on each S-100 board). Yet another past system I wish I still had...
Hope to see many of you this Saturday. Cheers!
Clay.