Howto repair a retro PC motherboard.

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  • Опубликовано: 19 янв 2025

Комментарии • 172

  • @philscomputerlab
    @philscomputerlab 10 месяцев назад +15

    Awesome 🎉

  • @SockyNoob
    @SockyNoob 10 месяцев назад +16

    What an excellent video. Imagine if we had videos and resources like this 10+ years ago. So many boards could have been saved. Always love your perfectionist trace repairs.

    • @CptJistuce
      @CptJistuce 10 месяцев назад +1

      10+ years ago, it wasn't viewed as worth the effort. There were so many boards, parts, and complete systems available for basically the cost of hauling them away.

  • @notneb82
    @notneb82 10 месяцев назад +28

    The fact that you can clearly see the fiberglass weave on that spot means something hit this thing pretty hard. Surprising that there wasn't much more damage than a couple of messed up caps and one small trace break.

    • @SidneyCritic
      @SidneyCritic 10 месяцев назад +6

      You don't see fibreglass that much these days. If you watch Apple and modern video card repairs the PCB is closer to compressed paper. I've seen iPhone PCB turn to dust, ie, burn, with a high current short on STS Telecom channel. Modern GPUs are the worse, because pads fall off or go lose under BGAs all the time , and that's not mentioning the cracks at the holding down lug that northwestrepair is repairing all the time.

    • @SockyNoob
      @SockyNoob 10 месяцев назад

      Ikr. I would've thought that this is a multi layer PCB and one of the inner layers got messed up too.

    • @SimonSideburns
      @SimonSideburns 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@SockyNoob I'm sure on the close-up view through the microscope that you can see the very edge of another trace inside the board to the right-hand side of the damaged area. Maybe I'm seeing a reflection or something but it's around the 20:05 time in the video. I'm guessing that it's not going to be highly populated with traces that close to a screw hole, so this board is quite lucky.

  • @jamesrdgrs
    @jamesrdgrs 10 месяцев назад +17

    This was a great "Intro to vintage PC repair" video. The XT prototyping board has made diagnosing many a PC so much easier.

  • @ismail3404
    @ismail3404 10 месяцев назад +4

    It seems like this channel is the only one on RUclips that repairs retro computers. There are others, like @RetroSpector78; I subscribe to these two channels, haha. I started college in the year 2000, still encountering EDO RAM and ISA slots. At that time, all I had was a Pentium 133Mhz with 16MB of RAM, and a 1.2G HDD that I partitioned into two. Watching this video really brings back beautiful memories, how much I miss those days, hunting from shop to shop looking for second-hand items, because that's all I could afford back then. It was still the era of 1.4MB floppy disks and CRT tube monitors. Now everything is online, if something breaks, you just replace it, no effort to repair unless the item is expensive.

    • @logipilot
      @logipilot 10 месяцев назад

      check out adriens digital basement, epitronics, usagielectric and louis rossman 😊

    • @logipilot
      @logipilot 10 месяцев назад +2

      adrien: mostly 8-bit, epitronic: ibm, usagi: pre dos, rossman: smd apple

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад +7

      Ah, there are many great channels. Adrian has been mentioned already, then there are tony359, bits and bolts, vswitchzero and many more great creators. Check those out if you are into this kind of hobby.

    • @drewnewby
      @drewnewby 10 месяцев назад

      @adriansdigitalbasement, @bitsundbolts, @CRG, @Epictronics1, @miketech1024,
      @mrsolderfix3996, @necro_ware, @NoelsRetroLab, @RetroSpector78, @ScanLinesAU,
      @scrap_computing, @TechTangents, @The8BitGuy, @TheRasteri, @vswitchzero, and many more that focus on builds, testing, etc.

  • @MarkusQu
    @MarkusQu 10 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks. Your Videos reactivate my „love“ for old PCs again. Successfully fix a 486 MoBo yesterday. Normally want to assemble the PC but get stuck playing Dune II on my test Bench :)
    Enemy.Harvester.Destroyed!!

  • @Stratotank3r
    @Stratotank3r 10 месяцев назад +2

    Super klasse! Ich mag jedes Reparaturvideo. Jetzt brauche ich dringend das Prototypen Messboard zum testen der Busse und auch einen Chipreader für die BIOS Bausteine. Im Keller liegt noch das arme Shuttle und Board aus dem PCD-4H, neben einem 386SX Brett und einem 486er Doner, was im Reset stecken bleibt.

  • @the_kombinator
    @the_kombinator 10 месяцев назад +8

    This comes at a good time - AT boards are getting harder to find (working ones anyhow) and I have a small pile of 286/386/486 boards (even a socket 7) that I couldn't bring myself to throw out. As soon as its cheaper for me to buy a multimeter/scope like that rather than a board I need to complete a system, I'm getting one and trying my hand at this.
    Very motivational Necroware ;)

    • @herauthon
      @herauthon 10 месяцев назад

      How to store boards - in antistatic bags - is bubblefoam good or bad shielding ?

    • @SzymekCRX
      @SzymekCRX 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@herauthonI store my boards in appropriate size zip bags. Got hunsreds of them already preserved that way 😀

  • @k9cj5
    @k9cj5 10 месяцев назад +6

    Nice! I cant wait to watch this! Its friday, I got a cold beer and a episode of Necroware waiting for me a when I get off work today.

  • @eugenekiselev
    @eugenekiselev 2 месяца назад

    Thanks a lot for sharing these steps! I’m trying to revive a dead socket 462 eMachine MB and your channel is a great knowledge source for not very experienced people like myself :)

  • @JVHShack
    @JVHShack 10 месяцев назад +4

    As always, you are AWESOME, Necroware! Thank you for this video. I'll save it to my "watch later" list as a reference.

  • @kyoudaiken
    @kyoudaiken 10 месяцев назад +3

    VLSI was actually a custom gate array / ASIC manufacturer. Intel just uses VLSI to realize their own chipsets. Maybe in later revisions, Intel let them print their logo onto these chips, whereas in the earlier revisions they didn't.

  • @sydneybiscuit
    @sydneybiscuit 10 месяцев назад

    This was an amazing introduction to postmortem analyses, forensic diagnostics, and hands-on repair (:

  • @Luke-rr9po
    @Luke-rr9po 10 месяцев назад +1

    What an excellent video - thank you! 😊

  • @antonschaf4088
    @antonschaf4088 10 месяцев назад +1

    Interesting! And fun to watch!

  • @qzorn4440
    @qzorn4440 10 месяцев назад +1

    It is amazing to watch a PC motherboard repair using basic test equipment. The little oscilloscope worked very nice. 😎 Thank you.

  • @TheRetroBristolian
    @TheRetroBristolian 10 месяцев назад +1

    what a fantastically well explained and easy to follow video, as usual a really enjoyable watch 🙂

  • @jaybird57
    @jaybird57 8 месяцев назад +1

    Very good video! Nice to watch, easy to follow. Not to fast and not to slow. Thank you for making great vids!

  • @userperson5259
    @userperson5259 9 месяцев назад

    So educational and informative. Amazing to watch the trace repair.

  • @teknologyguy5638
    @teknologyguy5638 9 месяцев назад

    Great video, can't believe I missed this a month ago

  • @ShrineOfLife
    @ShrineOfLife 10 месяцев назад

    god, i love it! for me, its mezmerizing, I could watch that kind of repairs for hours. its so good to safe these old boards. hail to the old days. cheers buddy and thank you for your time and patience!

  • @command_line_channel
    @command_line_channel 10 месяцев назад

    Very useful and a good starting point, indeed! I got six dead AT motherboards, hope to get at least some of them working one day. Will study more from your videos. I guess I need to buy an oscilloscope.

  • @pipschannel1222
    @pipschannel1222 10 месяцев назад

    Great walk through Scorp!
    Excellent idea to empower fellow retro aficianados who just started to collect old crap and want to learn to repair it themself ;-)

  • @blaaaaaaarghable
    @blaaaaaaarghable 10 месяцев назад +1

    Probing right at the crystal can change the frequency - your scope probe will add some capacitance to ground. Better to measure at an output of the chip driving the crystal

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад +3

      Right, but sometimes it's not possible, because the crystals are connected directly to the chipset and used internally. I forgot to mension, that the crystals should be measured with high impedance probe.

  • @tigheklory
    @tigheklory 10 месяцев назад

    This video is a great stating point for people getting into repair! I love how you put everything together so I can send this to people wanting to learn.

  • @Grus0
    @Grus0 10 месяцев назад

    Superb video mate. This will become your most viewed - remind me to check in a year!

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      Hehe, 😄 thank you. Let's check in a year then.

  • @Studiohalfmoon3777
    @Studiohalfmoon3777 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks for doing the repair videos, You have a talent for teaching in a 'NON GEEK" terminology, using very relatable analogies of whats going on. I have really enjoyed your videos and learned a lot. I have some older boards I need to re-visit now. Great Content. 😂

  • @Yrouel86
    @Yrouel86 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent video. Another thing to check for early in the troubleshooting process is jumper configuration, it has happened relatively often that I got boards that appeared dead or were otherwise malfunctioning that just needed to be configured properly. Sometimes even a single missing jumper can completely bork a board.
    A tip to more easily follow complex jumper configurations is to highlight the lines of the desired settings either on the pdf itself or on paper after printing the jumpers cheat sheet

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад +1

      Good point! Thank you.

  • @celabud
    @celabud 10 месяцев назад

    This is a really good and interesting video. I learned some very useful stuff today. Thank you, sir.

  • @briangoldberg4439
    @briangoldberg4439 10 месяцев назад

    Great to see another video from you! Hope you are well

  • @pavelfara9333
    @pavelfara9333 10 месяцев назад

    I have fixed dozens of boards and other cards based on your methods! 👍 This is a very good tutorial! The TRW is also a cool project. I am contributing quite often. Thank you for your videos!
    Just one thing to add for the viewers - if you went through all the usual suspects and the board is still dead or acting weirdly - check ALL the pins of the big QFP chips. They go loose pretty often on those 30+ yrs old boards. Sometimes it is like the chip almost desoldered itself. Based on my experience this is a super common failure!

  • @cpu_duke
    @cpu_duke 10 месяцев назад

    Very nice! Thanks for the great guide to this topic. I definitely now need an oscilloscope!!!

  • @MrVipeg
    @MrVipeg 10 месяцев назад

    Great tutorial. Really useful.
    BTW, it is always a great idea to fix crystals to the PCBs by soldering their bodies to the PCBs' ground pads.

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      Thank you. Sure, I fixed it after testing.

  • @mikes989
    @mikes989 10 месяцев назад

    nice.
    Last year I watched all your repair videos, and from other channels too, to soak me up and learn skills and tricks before starting my repairs and restorations.
    These past month I have been repairing/restoring several motherboards, cards and other parts, all at the same time, crazy, hahaha
    The one that has taken me the most work has been a 386 motherboard ravaged by leaky battery, maybe eating it away for years. I have had to reconstruct the veins on both sides. Of some only the footprint remained. Last night I finished with the lines, and today I will do it with a resistor array that received a hit and half of it was destroyed. Since I don't have the same 10x10k array, I only have an 8x10k array that I will adapt to replace the 5 destroyed resistors. I did something similar with a floppy drive with a destroyed array, I reconnected the common line and replaced the only destroyed resistor with a discrete one.
    At the same time, I have been repairing and restoring a PS/2 model 50, one part of which I literally rescued from the mud and trash. More than 20 years in dirty/dusty storage room left it absolutely disgusting. The owner, a neophyte, took it apart and slip the screwdriver three times, destroying several lines and 5 resistors. I already rebuilt the lines (difficult because they are very thin) and all that remains is to put the missing resistors. Thanks to having the schematics I know what its values are. It's a task for later.
    I always take a while to complete a repair or restoration, what scares me the most is the moment to test it, hahaha.
    and so I have others in the restoration queue, and all this for now without a debug card, or oscilloscope (I need them for some , I am waiting to receive them, the scope similar to this one).
    right now I have a day off, and are disassembling a Olivetti M4 (Pentium) that an acquaintance gave me. it need a deep clean and some fixes. I´ll keep it but will replace its guts for some older ones.

  • @RedStar-dz5tc
    @RedStar-dz5tc 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks for sharing your expertise! Really valuable resource which I and others usually watch and then rewatch again like your other videos..

  • @AlbertAGhazaleh
    @AlbertAGhazaleh 10 месяцев назад

    Another outstanding video!
    Awesome troubleshooting tips and how to's on bringing a mobo back from the dead ❤

  • @Metalliferous
    @Metalliferous 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent video as always. Thanks for a end-to-end tutorial, but also all the other repair videos you've made so far. It got me into repairing my old vintage hardware with great success so far.
    Regarding the ISA bus measurement: I typically put the tip of my probe towards the top and outside of the slot, and gently press against the top from the pin from the outside inwards. This makes sure I never short pins, since my probe is not going that far into the slot.

  • @StephenHenryIrl
    @StephenHenryIrl 10 месяцев назад

    Amazing video, thank you for this.

  • @rhuwyn
    @rhuwyn 10 месяцев назад

    I've always really enjoyed your repair videos. This one is great to show you where to start. I think what a cool think to do might be to make a repair playlist with this as the first video, and then. Either, with future videos, or maybe past videos slowly organize them in a way where someone can start with this video with the very basics, and then graduate to more advanced topics. Once there is enough content perhaps you can even market it as a training course!

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      Thank you! Glad you like it. The idea is great, but I'm still learning how to make quality content and many older videos are not quite as good. May be I just should start a new playlist for this. I'll think about it. Thank you for the idea.

    • @mikes989
      @mikes989 10 месяцев назад

      @@necro_warea play list is a goood idea. or several ones, for different topics

  • @kencreppin2146
    @kencreppin2146 10 месяцев назад

    Always great to see a Master at work!!

  • @mcawrse
    @mcawrse 10 месяцев назад

    Nice work as always! I have run into a few boards that act dead without a cmos battery, so that might be something to look out for. It would have been interesting to see what the post card would say in that situation, but didn't have one at the time. Thanks for the video. I always enjoy seeing what you have been working on.

  • @superduper2024
    @superduper2024 7 месяцев назад

    Damn brother, you are great this, thanks for sharing.

  • @rkurbatov
    @rkurbatov 10 месяцев назад

    That's cool. And even more cool that despite being quite hard to find the old motherboards are much easier to repair. It was so until probably early Socket 7 motherboards with the small exception of the intel mobos of S5/S7 family like Zappa with plenty of SMD components.

  • @Leeki85
    @Leeki85 10 месяцев назад

    I have old 386SX board that has 10 beep error code, which means: "CMOS shutdown register read/write error". I've checked all traces around minor battery leak. They have continuity, but I've fixed one most damaged one with soldered wire. Still no luck. Thermal camera shows everything OK.
    Thanks to this video I've checked oscillators and ISA data lines using multimeter with Hz option. Not as good as oscilloscope, but it shows some activity at least.

  • @cellone710
    @cellone710 10 месяцев назад

    This so helpful. Please keep at it, I love your videos. Could you cover the equipment you use or recommend buying. Ty

  • @humidbeing
    @humidbeing 10 месяцев назад

    Many datasheets for common ICs found on motherboards specifically mention to use tantalums. They often have a note saying if you use electrolytics it needs to be a much larger value cap. (This is most likely because larger capacity electrolytics usually have lower ESR).

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад +2

      In high precision high frequency circuits you usually combine many large electrolytic caps with some small ceramic caps. This is because large electrolytic caps have higher ESR, smaller ones lower. This topic is complicated, but on power rails of mainboards of that age, you can easily replace tantalums caps through electrolytic ones. The reason why they used tantalums back then, was because electrolytic were not as good as today. They leaked and dried out, but today tantalums are barely used, because they are too expensive.

  • @J-Tech95
    @J-Tech95 10 месяцев назад

    Yet another great video my friend! Cheers to you!

  • @TheWizardHW
    @TheWizardHW 10 месяцев назад

    amazing video Necroware. Thank you!!

  • @DevilbyMoonlight
    @DevilbyMoonlight 10 месяцев назад

    Great Stuff... newbies will find it very useful!

  • @charleston_
    @charleston_ 10 месяцев назад

    Another great video!
    Happy March from the US

  • @K10driver
    @K10driver 10 месяцев назад +1

    Intel has bought the VLSI Chipset and used it. First it was a license but later owned by Intel. Its Intels first "own" chipset with a high integrated silikon and the start of all Chipsets made by the blue guys. Keep the Board if you like such Details :)
    I like the music douring the trace repair !
    And im missing some insane Overdrive content ❤

  • @tomekrv942
    @tomekrv942 10 месяцев назад

    Thank You for this video.

  • @wschaeffenacker
    @wschaeffenacker 9 месяцев назад

    Loved it, thank you.

  • @wettuga2762
    @wettuga2762 10 месяцев назад

    Do you recommend a video where you washed a sticky and/or very dirty motherboard? I have a few in that state and would like to clean them up "the right way" before trying any kind of repair. I will eventually watch all your videos because although I'm just a newbie on computer repair and some videos don't directly relate to my VERY basic repairs, they're still very interesting to watch 🙂

  • @mamuttme
    @mamuttme 10 месяцев назад

    One thing about measuring the clocks with the scope: it should be square waves. On 2-pin crystals you should observe a sine wave, because it is a simple passive device. But the the places where you measure are most likely somewhere down the path through logic chips -> it should be a square wave. I suspect that your scope doesn't have the bandwidth to show squares waves at these frequencies (2 times more is a bare minimum, but it only enables us checking if the signal is changing). So if you want to check a 50MHz digital signal 100MHz is a bare minimum.
    4 pin crystals: these are actually a crystal + a generator inside, the signal should be square wave at the pin already.

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад +1

      It's 32kHz, quite slow, should be fine. What you say is correct, but this oscilloscope makes it up to 33MHz reliably. I think, the crystal was faulty and I got some back leaking from the connected IC.

    • @mamuttme
      @mamuttme 10 месяцев назад

      Sorry, I jumped into the conclusion that you are saying about all the clock signals. On the RTC signal it should be a sine wave, since it is a 2 pin device, right!

  • @sungsampandora
    @sungsampandora 8 месяцев назад

    Kurz und knackig 👍

  • @wkjagt
    @wkjagt 10 месяцев назад

    Excellent video. Thanks for sharing! It would be interesting to see what pin on the CPU the broken trace connected to, to have an idea of why the board was completely dead. Given that none of the address lines had any activity, it seems like the CPU was completely halted. Maybe a halt, or interrupt, or ready pin or something?

  • @minutemanqvs
    @minutemanqvs 10 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent! By the way, do you have a particular « cheap » oscilloscope to suggest for these kind of measurments?

  • @canaldrive_r
    @canaldrive_r 10 месяцев назад

    Excelente vídeo! Sou muito fã desse canal. Obrigado!

  • @waelsadek81
    @waelsadek81 10 месяцев назад

    The loading capacitors for the crystal should be checked first ?

  • @collectingretrotech
    @collectingretrotech 10 месяцев назад

    Great video

  • @tony359
    @tony359 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the nice video!

  • @mikes989
    @mikes989 10 месяцев назад

    my step before power on
    2 - check everything and anything. all lines, all components, all legs of the ICs, look for any cut, bruise, touching legs (caused by any pressure o a hit), foreign bodies/particles (i´ve found very small metal things,) etc.
    not only can provoke failure to boot, but killing shorts
    I do this BEFORE put any power into the system

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      Yeah, that's a good hint as well. As I said in the video, looking for mechanical damages can be made in the first step. In the most cases touching pins are not critical and power pins would produce a short, which you should measure on the power connector. But if you want to be really sure, it's a good idea to make it first.

  • @Dudulinek82
    @Dudulinek82 10 месяцев назад

    is so satisfying ... change broken components, restore traces, power on and hear BEEEP ☺🔊❤

  • @donglekludge9219
    @donglekludge9219 10 месяцев назад

    I wonder if the master himself (or someone else) could recommend what next to try in my situation with a broken Gigabyte GA-486US board. It doesn't work at all and just produces dashes on the post card. There is no damage that I can see and no battery leakage. The clock signals all look fine and the CPU has 5v. Reset line goes high then low, but there is absolutely no activity anywhere - Measuring at an ISA slot, all data lines are stuck permanently high. A18, A17 and A29 are all at 0v and don't move. All of the other address lines stay at around 3.8 - 4v.

  • @FGT952
    @FGT952 10 месяцев назад

    As always, great video! I wonder, which CPU signal was the cut trace? It stuck the whole system, so maybe it was CPU Reset ?

    • @FGT952
      @FGT952 10 месяцев назад

      After some googling, It seems like A24 pin. Interesting it bricked whole system

  • @IntenseGrid
    @IntenseGrid 16 дней назад

    Very informative. I really like your little scope and beefy tweezers. Got links to where you got them?

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  14 дней назад

      Thanks. I don't have any particular links, just usual online stores.

  • @stbagn
    @stbagn 10 месяцев назад

    What is that portable scope model you use? I have a bench scope but this looks super convenient!

  • @AnD_RoM
    @AnD_RoM 10 месяцев назад

    Ремонт конечно простенький. Но само описание подхода к ремонту самое то для новичков. Жаль, конечно, что мало видео по ремонту старого железа попадается с подробностями. Да и в текстовом виде с фото их маловато будет

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      Спасибо! Да, так и есть, в данном видео ремонт сам по себе не хитрый, но я этого конечно заранее не знал. Меня просто часто спрашивают, какие шаги я предпринимаю, когда чиню что-то и я хотел показать, что я обычно делаю. Если вас интересуют варианты посложнее, у меня есть видео с разными уровнями сложности. Вот эта починка например мне лично особенно понравилась: ruclips.net/video/i9DTA81xUN0/видео.htmlsi=Kd9L-kmZAulpdJiG

  • @glufke
    @glufke 10 месяцев назад

    I'm wondering if you have a video explaining how to fix a PC XT power supply. Thanks!!!

  • @Constantin314
    @Constantin314 10 месяцев назад

    a guide for newer boards, like skt 462 let's say, would also be welcomed :) thanks for the info :)

    • @SzymekCRX
      @SzymekCRX 10 месяцев назад

      There is never a guide possible 😀 each board and issue is different. I have for example 20 462 socket boards to repair and each one of them has a different issue. A basic troubleshoot video for such board generation is highly doable

    • @Constantin314
      @Constantin314 10 месяцев назад

      @@SzymekCRX you're right. i have the infamous Abit BP6 with no signs of life :( i don't know where to start from, newbie is too little said :)

    • @SzymekCRX
      @SzymekCRX 10 месяцев назад

      @@Constantin314 no power on or no post? Pci code debug card is also a must in Your case. Doest it power on alone, with and ram?

    • @Constantin314
      @Constantin314 10 месяцев назад

      @@SzymekCRXno post. the cpu and nb get hot, cpu fan spins. no post beeps or video signal on agp or pci. cause of the cpu and nb getting hot i think the board can be repaired

  • @ajdothack
    @ajdothack 10 месяцев назад

    Great tutorial!

  • @mikes989
    @mikes989 10 месяцев назад

    Today I just completed the repair of a 386 motherboard. (vogons: "some help to repair/restore a leaking battery ravaged motherboard" post)
    It is the first one I have done with such a level of damage and it took me a while. but when I was measuring everything for the last time before doing the first test, I realized that I had put the power connector on the motherboard backwards!!!!! ouch!!! It was thanks to verifying the 5V. When I went to connect the PSU I saw that they were on the opposite side, hahaha.
    Thank goodness I took that last measurement and my short-term memory jumped right away.
    Tomorrow I will unsolder them again. It is something that is a little difficult for me without a desoldering station.
    the the test will come, power and signals with a scope. I dont have a POST debug card. then with the CPU (will use a TI486DLC/40) and video card. fingers crossed

  • @fft2020
    @fft2020 10 месяцев назад

    Always an awesome video by Necrware ! 🙂
    What is that super video card you have there 5000+ on speedsys? My Cirrus Logic GD5422 is considered a fast card and only goes to 2300

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      Hi, thank you. It's a matter of the ISA bus speed and wait states. If everything is set for a faster throughput you should come to those values with the most real 16-bit cards. For the video I used WDC90C30 and with a CL-GD5420 I get similar values.

  • @vitaliikryvonos2681
    @vitaliikryvonos2681 9 месяцев назад

    Lucky star 5v-a1 motherboard sees only 1/4 of installed ram. 8mb of 32mb sdram pc100 stick. Ram is working fine on other machine. Any suggestions what can be wrong?

  • @Marco.Teixeira
    @Marco.Teixeira 10 месяцев назад

    Thank you for this video. One question please. Is it not needed to solder the cristal body to that large pad? (or the body of the cristal is wired to one of the legs?)

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you too. It's optional, but i did after the test was successful.

  • @Chernobyl250
    @Chernobyl250 10 месяцев назад

    BTW, a handy hack for erasing old EPROMs: if you have a SonicCare electric toothbrush, they often come with a stand that has a UV sanitizer lamp. This produces UV-C light and is perfect for erasing EPROMs. I just pop one in (remove the label first) facing towards the bulb, turn it on, and wait about 15 minutes. After that they come out 100% erased (all bits set to one).

    • @mikes989
      @mikes989 10 месяцев назад

      mm. as I dont have an UV eraser or any uv source, I did a "little" experiment. I put 12 1Mbit eeproms (27C010) to be erased with sunlight. I checked them every day. After 4 days (~8 hours of sun everyday, sometime some clouds) the first one had already been erased (initially it was not fully written, so it was partly "empty"). The erased ones were removed from the sun. the last one was completely erased after 12 sunny days. then all, together, received an additional day of sunlight . in some time, if everything is OK, I will erase more than 20 eeproms the same way, for further use.

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      I also experimented with it and at least in German summer sun, after a month I only got couple of bit flips. May be somewhere more in the direction of equator it works better, but in Germany, no way :)

    • @mikes989
      @mikes989 10 месяцев назад

      @@necro_ware I'm right below the Tropic of CancerI will use those eeproms in a couple of disk emulator cards. meanwhile I got in sight 4 LEDs in a zaplamp . will experiment with those too

    • @Chernobyl250
      @Chernobyl250 10 месяцев назад

      @@necro_ware Exactly - the amount of UVC in sunlight is far too low to erase EPROMs in a reasonable timeframe. Good thing though - or every one one of us would be dying from skin cancer!

    • @mikes989
      @mikes989 10 месяцев назад

      WHAT! my firs comment just disappeared..

  • @SzymekCRX
    @SzymekCRX 10 месяцев назад

    Can You rely on that ISA troubleshooting method with younger PCI motherboards with ISA slot? Socket 370, 462 boards

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      Yes, but the newer the board the more complicated it is.

  • @the_kombinator
    @the_kombinator 10 месяцев назад

    When I do repairs to the board traces like that, I cover them up with nail polish (epoxy) to isolate them.

  • @GameBacardi
    @GameBacardi 10 месяцев назад

    @necro_ware , do you have any experience, when graphic card is removed from ISA slot while 486 PC has power on and has fully booted... (waiting boot disk)?
    I accidentally did that, I did not noticed because system do not have any fans, I saw green led on MB later.
    How big damage this error could do?
    Now 486 wont do anything, I guess EEPROM is dead, not sure....

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад +1

      I guess, you were unlucky. It wouldn't necessarily damage anything, but you can get voltage peaks, which can end up bad. Probably, this is what happened to you. This howto should be a good start if you want to bring it back. Analyze the ISA bus and see what's happening

  • @MrQuist125
    @MrQuist125 5 месяцев назад

    ty sir nice work

  • @techteststutorialsHD
    @techteststutorialsHD 10 месяцев назад +1

    As always learned something.

  • @rallyscoot
    @rallyscoot 10 месяцев назад

    can you tell me which brand vinegar you are using?? What i can find isnt great stronger stuff.

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      No name from the next supermarket. You can use 10%, but it is quite aggressive. For beginners I suggest 3-4%, then you have 15-20 minutes to scrub and look around.

  • @herauthon
    @herauthon 10 месяцев назад

    THIS +4
    i got POST diagcard
    but that huge mesh-probe card.. where to get ?

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      The link is in the description

  • @SireSquish
    @SireSquish 10 месяцев назад

    What kind of scope is that, and do you know of a relatively affordable one such as that?

    • @mikes989
      @mikes989 10 месяцев назад +1

      around $70 in Amazon, I see. some older models (by only 2 years, lol) of the same manufacture or similar ones, around 40-50. some have upgradable firmware

  • @retroanderson
    @retroanderson 10 месяцев назад

    If a 486 board works except only the 16bit portion of the isa slot does work, where would you start?

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      It depends. If the board has transceivers, I'd start there.

  • @AlejandroRodolfoMendez
    @AlejandroRodolfoMendez 10 месяцев назад

    Nice work. Congrats.
    Where do you found those msdos utilities nowadays?

    • @nickwallette6201
      @nickwallette6201 10 месяцев назад

      The ones that check for cache and stuff? Check Phil's Computer Lab for benchmarks and utils. He's done a good job of categorizing some of those and putting them on disk images for convenience. But they are widely available other places too. You just have to know what to Google for. Win World is another good resource.

    • @mikes989
      @mikes989 10 месяцев назад

      @@nickwallette6201is there any mirror? dont know why I cant access the Phil's Computer Lab web site. I´ve got some tools and benchmarks from around but the Phil's pack may be better

  • @xjr358
    @xjr358 10 месяцев назад

    hey! Thanks for the video! can you please say what model of the oscilloscope you use?

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад +2

      Thank you. fnirsi-5012h

  • @szyszka8303
    @szyszka8303 10 месяцев назад

    Can't find any decent review & benchmark on Pentium Pro set for Desktop.
    Have you consider the tipic?

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад +2

      I have no Pentium pro hardware, so at this point I can't do anything in that direction.

  • @patrick2160
    @patrick2160 10 месяцев назад

    Welches Kontaktspray kommt hier zum Einsatz?

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      Verschiedene. WD40 Kontaktspray ist ganz gut oder Kontakt 60

  • @boardernut
    @boardernut 10 месяцев назад

    23:35 I remember there were some chipsets that added a small amount of cache, I thought this could be the case. nope.

  • @Nukle0n
    @Nukle0n 10 месяцев назад

    I just noticed on your logo/intro, the board looks like it's supposed to be a 16-bit ISA card, but aren't the components then on the wrong side of the board? They changed the orientation of the slot bracket relative to the card starting with PCI, so that the components face down in a traditional tower, but on ISA they would've been facing upwards.

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      Nice observation ;) and it's like you said

  • @BlackHoleForge
    @BlackHoleForge Месяц назад

    I know I'm a little late to the party, but I would like to know what is the name of the device that lets you read and dump bios images?
    I've got several old motherboards and I would like to contribute to the retro web.

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  Месяц назад

      The device is TL866 or the newer model T48. However, you don't need it if you just want to read the ROM. You can use DOS software to read it. There are many tools, f.e. NSSI

  • @bundesautobahn7
    @bundesautobahn7 10 месяцев назад

    Check the clocks... wieso erinnert mich das an die eine 386er-Hauptplatine, bei dem der Takt nach dem Anschalten in den Keller ging?😶

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад

      Gut beobachtet. Das war auch ein spannender Fall.

  • @1leggeddog
    @1leggeddog 10 месяцев назад

    very cool

  • @Neksus-M06
    @Neksus-M06 10 месяцев назад

    The card is a great tool, halves the time passed on probing.

  • @MonochromeWench
    @MonochromeWench 10 месяцев назад

    broken trace and tantalum by cpu socket look like the result of someone trying to remove the cpu with the wrong tools. I'm guessing trying to lever it up with a screwdriver and they applied a lot of force and the screwdriver slipped.

  • @mikes989
    @mikes989 10 месяцев назад

    bro, can you do the experiment of a Pentium in a 386 board and do live tests?

  • @the_kombinator
    @the_kombinator 10 месяцев назад

    13:50 - LMAO that's my go to after basic troubleshooting - replace the BIOS chips. 15-20% of the time, it does actually work.

    • @SzymekCRX
      @SzymekCRX 10 месяцев назад

      That is valid in my opinion when You cant read/write bios chip in an external programmer. My mandatory repair step is to pur bios chip in thebprogrammer and write latest bios and rechceck

  • @ramagdehz9400
    @ramagdehz9400 10 месяцев назад

    Is there a chance in the future making a video about socket 8 mb? This vid was great and very informative.

    • @necro_ware
      @necro_ware  10 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you. Currently I have no plans to make any videos about pentium pro, since I don't even have the hardware.