PET 8032....DEAD
Posted: Tue Jun 13, 2017 12:16 am
Sometimes, life just kicks you in the teeth.
After all this talk I've had on this forum about bringing out my beloved PET 8032, it is no more.
Well, I'm being a little dramatic here. Anyway, here's what happened.
I removed all of the custom work that had been done to the PCB and went back to stock. I haven't actually recapped the PCB yet. After talking about it in the other thread, I thought I would take a chance and just see if it still worked. So I plugged it back up and turned it on.
Monitor lights up and the image is a clear as the day it was made. Absolutely SHARP picture at 80 columns. I sometimes forget what a good monitor that was designed for 80 columns can do.
So I'm absolutely thrilled. I've been writing some BASIC programs for the last 20 minutes and it's working great.
Then, it happened. I heard some "sizzling" and then a pop. When I realized what I heard I jumped up and killed the power to it. That's when I saw smoke come out of the back of the monitor. Now the whole downstairs stinks. lol
What's weird is that I never actually saw the screen go off! It's like it would have kept working but I didn't take any chances. I would have assumed the picture gone out instantly.
Also, the PCB seems to be fine. Nothing is hot. The giant capacitor I've been talking about looks good and is cool to the touch. So I think something fried on the CRT itself or on the analog board for the CRT.
I know there are some high voltages in that CRT so I'm not going to touch it. I've disconnected the PCB from the power supply. And I'm going to put a note inside reminding me to NOT plug it in until it is repaired.
So, I'm a little bummed out about it. I've worked this entire weekend cleaning this thing up. Ugh.
On the positive side, I think the PCB would probably be OK. Also, there are a couple of places in town that work on plasma TV's so they might also fix CRT's. So I might take it by there and see if they could fix it.
Anyway, that's my depressing news for the night. :-/
After all this talk I've had on this forum about bringing out my beloved PET 8032, it is no more.
Well, I'm being a little dramatic here. Anyway, here's what happened.
I removed all of the custom work that had been done to the PCB and went back to stock. I haven't actually recapped the PCB yet. After talking about it in the other thread, I thought I would take a chance and just see if it still worked. So I plugged it back up and turned it on.
Monitor lights up and the image is a clear as the day it was made. Absolutely SHARP picture at 80 columns. I sometimes forget what a good monitor that was designed for 80 columns can do.
So I'm absolutely thrilled. I've been writing some BASIC programs for the last 20 minutes and it's working great.
Then, it happened. I heard some "sizzling" and then a pop. When I realized what I heard I jumped up and killed the power to it. That's when I saw smoke come out of the back of the monitor. Now the whole downstairs stinks. lol
What's weird is that I never actually saw the screen go off! It's like it would have kept working but I didn't take any chances. I would have assumed the picture gone out instantly.
Also, the PCB seems to be fine. Nothing is hot. The giant capacitor I've been talking about looks good and is cool to the touch. So I think something fried on the CRT itself or on the analog board for the CRT.
I know there are some high voltages in that CRT so I'm not going to touch it. I've disconnected the PCB from the power supply. And I'm going to put a note inside reminding me to NOT plug it in until it is repaired.
So, I'm a little bummed out about it. I've worked this entire weekend cleaning this thing up. Ugh.
On the positive side, I think the PCB would probably be OK. Also, there are a couple of places in town that work on plasma TV's so they might also fix CRT's. So I might take it by there and see if they could fix it.
Anyway, that's my depressing news for the night. :-/