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Amiga computer related discussion => Amiga Hardware Issues and discussion => Topic started by: orb85750 on February 10, 2012, 02:21:46 AM
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I have an A4000 with a very clean motherboard, but it has a dark gray screen boot problem. I disconnected everything. Once the insert disk screen came up for about 10 seconds, but then it reverted to the dark gray screen.
I noticed that the PSU fan speed was all over the place, so I thought it might be the PSU. I replaced it with a known working one. I powered up and all seemed perfect for 30 seconds, but then the damn dark gray screen popped up again. Since then, I have been unable to get it to work again at all. I tried a different CPU card, but that didn't help. All the chips/memory are secure.
Has anyone experienced anything like this before? It seems to be so close to working. I'm stumped.
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I have an A4000 with a very clean motherboard, but it has a dark gray screen boot problem. I disconnected everything. Once the insert disk screen came up for about 10 seconds, but then it reverted to the dark gray screen.
I noticed that the PSU fan speed was all over the place, so I thought it might be the PSU. I replaced it with a known working one. I powered up and all seemed perfect for 30 seconds, but then the damn dark gray screen popped up again. Since then, I have been unable to get it to work again at all. I tried a different CPU card, but that didn't help. All the chips/memory are secure.
Has anyone experienced anything like this before? It seems to be so close to working. I'm stumped.
It smacks of a ram problem, maybe tarnished sockets. Be sure the chip simm is in the right socket and is indeed a chip simm.
Look the Pins in the psu plug over well, if 1 is tarnished or spread open a bit it may be a bad connection problem, usually on the +5v wire.
Reseat the A3640 accelerator board and make sure its on the plastic standoff pins.
Have the caps leaked on the A3640? they are known to eat a trace under the leaking caps at times.
check all jumper blocks. move them on the pins and be sure they are making contact.
Mech
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It smacks of a ram problem, maybe tarnished sockets. Be sure the chip simm is in the right socket and is indeed a chip simm.
Look the Pins in the psu plug over well, if 1 is tarnished or spread open a bit it may be a bad connection problem, usually on the +5v wire.
Reseat the A3640 accelerator board and make sure its on the plastic standoff pins.
Have the caps leaked on the A3640? they are known to eat a trace under the leaking caps at times.
check all jumper blocks. move them on the pins and be sure they are making contact.
Mech
I have another machine that's working, so I can move in known working
parts -- and I have done some of that (PSU and CPU card), without success.
I don't want to mess with my working machine too much or I might end up
with two non-working.
Memory & sockets look good. I removed the fast ram, which did not help at all.
PSU is good. I tried my other (working) PSU with same result.
Reseated A3640, no help. Still same problem if I insert my working A3630 too.
No leaky caps anywhere, as far as I can tell. The machine looks damn good and clean,
much better than my working machine.
All jumper connections checked.
THE POWER LED is flashing about once per second. Does that have
any specific meaning?
Any other suggestions, anyone?
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I have another machine that's working, so I can move in known working
parts -- and I have done some of that (PSU and CPU card), without success.
I don't want to mess with my working machine too much or I might end up
with two non-working.
Memory & sockets look good. I removed the fast ram, which did not help at all.
PSU is good. I tried my other (working) PSU with same result.
Reseated A3640, no help. Still same problem if I insert my working A3630 too.
No leaky caps anywhere, as far as I can tell. The machine looks damn good and clean,
much better than my working machine.
All jumper connections checked.
THE POWER LED is flashing about once per second. Does that have
any specific meaning?
Any other suggestions, anyone?
Do you see a light grey screen before the dark grey.?
If not then I suggest your machine is not getting to the post test.
Taken from the Amiga 4000 Service Manual:
"Passed Test
Light Gray Initial hardware configuration tests passed.
Initial system software tests passed.
Final initialization test passed.
Failed Test
Red ROM Error - Reseat or replace
Green CHIP RAM error (reset AGNUS and re-test)
Blue Custom Chip(s) Error
Yellow 68000 detected error before software trapped it (GURU)
The system performs the following test sequence:
1.1. Delays beginning the tests a fraction of a second to allow the hardware to stabilize.
2.Jumps to ROM code in diagnostic card (if found)
3.Disables and clears all DMA and interrupts.
4.Turns on the screen.
5.Checks the general hardware configuration.
If the screen remains a light gray colors and the tests continue, the hardware is OK.
If an error occurs, the system halts.
6.Performs checksum test on ROMs.
If the system fails the ROM test, the screen display turns red and the system halts."
Does the sequence above occur or are you seeing dark grey from switch-on ?
Try booting with just the fast ram in the fast ram sockets and see what that does. any difference?
Then try booting with both mouse buttons held down. Any difference?
Might be telling you to suck eggs but only make one change at a time each time you try to troubleshoot.
There is a minute chance that something is wrong with video set-up and you are dropping to a grey screen because logically that is what is being displayed.?
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Do you see a light grey screen before the dark grey.?
If not then I suggest your machine is not getting to the post test.
Taken from the Amiga 4000 Service Manual:
"Passed Test
Light Gray Initial hardware configuration tests passed.
Initial system software tests passed.
Final initialization test passed.
Failed Test
Red ROM Error - Reseat or replace
Green CHIP RAM error (reset AGNUS and re-test)
Blue Custom Chip(s) Error
Yellow 68000 detected error before software trapped it (GURU)
The system performs the following test sequence:
1.1. Delays beginning the tests a fraction of a second to allow the hardware to stabilize.
2.Jumps to ROM code in diagnostic card (if found)
3.Disables and clears all DMA and interrupts.
4.Turns on the screen.
5.Checks the general hardware configuration.
If the screen remains a light gray colors and the tests continue, the hardware is OK.
If an error occurs, the system halts.
6.Performs checksum test on ROMs.
If the system fails the ROM test, the screen display turns red and the system halts."
Does the sequence above occur or are you seeing dark grey from switch-on ?
Try booting with just the fast ram in the fast ram sockets and see what that does. any difference?
Then try booting with both mouse buttons held down. Any difference?
Might be telling you to suck eggs but only make one change at a time each time you try to troubleshoot.
There is a minute chance that something is wrong with video set-up and you are dropping to a grey screen because logically that is what is being displayed.?
Thanks for the suggestions.
It goes directly to the dark gray screen -- no light gray seen at any point.
If I remove the chip ram and leave in some fast ram, I get a bright green screen.
Putting the chip ram back in, I'm back to the dark gray.
If I boot and hold down both mouse buttons, there's no difference -- still dark gray.
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Thanks for the suggestions.
It goes directly to the dark gray screen -- no light gray seen at any point.
If I remove the chip ram and leave in some fast ram, I get a bright green screen.
Putting the chip ram back in, I'm back to the dark gray.
If I boot and hold down both mouse buttons, there's no difference -- still dark gray.
Okay so its not a video issue. And by removing the ram you've shown the basic hardware and POST is working, so that's encouraging.
I guess you've tried booting with just chip ram.?
I think the flashing pwr light LED means there is a system error in general. As that's what happens if you guru on restart.
Another suggestion is to remove the riser card and see what happens. Rarely they can have issues but they usually cause addon card issues rather than system halts.
Finally take the MB out and check both sides carefully with a magnifying glass checking for component damage or bad joints. Then reassemble and verify your jumper settings:
Fucntion: Jumper: Setting: Description:
CLK90 Clock Source J100:1-2 X-X X Internal (020/030)
J100:2-3 X X-X External (040)
CPU Clock Source J104:1-2 X-X X Internal
J104:2-3 X X-X External
ROM Speed J151:1-2 X-X X 200ns
J151:2-3 X X-X 160ns
CHIP RAM Size J213:1-2 X-X X 2 Meg
J213:2-3 X X-X 8 Meg (yeah right)
Enable Second J351:1-2 X-X No Second internal floppy drive
Internal Floppy or 1.76MB floppy drive
J351: X X Enable second internal floppy drive
880k as DF1:
Redirect DF0: J352:1-2 X-X X Internal: DF0: and DF1: internal
DF2: and DF3: external
External: DF2: and DF1: internal
DF0: and DF3: external
Enable DSACK J850:1-2 X X DSACK enable. Required if CPU is a
68020. Also requires U860 and U152.
J850:1-2 X-X No DSACK.
RAM Size J852:1-2 X-X X RAM size 1 Meg x 32
J852:2-3 X X-X RAM size 256k x 32
Select NTSC/PAL J212:1-2 X-X X Select NTSC
J212:2-3 X X-X Select PAL
VBB\MA10 J214:2-3 X X-X Supplied VBB to ALICE
J214:1-2 X-X X ALICE supplies MA10 for 8 Meg CHIP
(NO it DOESN'T WORK!)
Select Sync on Green J500:1-2 X-X X Sync on Green Disabled
J500:2-3 X X-X Sync on Green Enabled
LISA Sync J501:2-3 X X-X Default
Select DAC Sync J502:1-2 X-X X DAC Syncs on Green
J502:2-3 X X-X DAC used standard signal
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I highly doubt that I have any jumper settings wrong, given that the machine did work very briefly the other day. Even if I remove all the fast ram, it does not boot with the chip ram. The daughter board was taken out and had no apparent effect.
Anyone else have any ideas as to how this machine was not working, then working very briefly, now not working no matter what I try?
I can throw my A3000 against the wall and it will still boot. These A4000 machines are very finicky?
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I can throw my A3000 against the wall and it will still boot. These A4000 machines are very finicky?
I generally find the opposite; the A3000 is full of low quality IC sockets that tend to cause various issues over time.
Anyway, sounds like you've tried pretty much everything you can. The 2nd CPU board you tried - was that a known working one?
If you run out of the options, I can have a look at the board for you. A couple of years ago I developed special hardware and software to report stages of software execution in A4000 ROM during boot which makes it possible to see exactly where the machine is failing during boot. Then it's possible to proceed with a repair based on the clues it provides.
http://amiga.serveftp.net
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I highly doubt that I have any jumper settings wrong, given that the machine did work very briefly the other day. Even if I remove all the fast ram, it does not boot with the chip ram. The daughter board was taken out and had no apparent effect.
Anyone else have any ideas as to how this machine was not working, then working very briefly, now not working no matter what I try?
I can throw my A3000 against the wall and it will still boot. These A4000 machines are very finicky?
If anything A4000's are inhearantly more reliable than 3000's due to surface mounting.
The psu's are pretty good. The 3000 suffers from 20 year old sockets that tarnish and make bad contact. Thats being said i have had good success making either run reliable.
Its much like a used car, sometimes used computers have been treated badly or developed problems. Used is used ;)
have you physically pulled the roms and reinstalled them, i have seen roms with a pin bent under that makes contact at times.
i still think you have a trace thats eaten under the A3640 or a contact problem on ram or cpu slot.
mech
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If anything A4000's are inhearantly more reliable than 3000's due to surface mounting.
The psu's are pretty good. The 3000 suffers from 20 year old sockets that tarnish and make bad contact. Thats being said i have had good success making either run reliable.
Its much like a used car, sometimes used computers have been treated badly or developed problems. Used is used ;)
have you physically pulled the roms and reinstalled them, i have seen roms with a pin bent under that makes contact at times.
i still think you have a trace thats eaten under the A3640 or a contact problem on ram or cpu slot.
mech
Sure, maybe I've just been lucky with the A3000 and unlucky with the A4000 -- I'm not the original owner of any of these machines, so I know nothing about their histories.
How can there be a bad trace in the area of the CPU slot? (How would that happen?)
RAM problem? I do get a green screen when I remove the chip ram, then back to gray when it's installed. The fast ram cannot be the cause (since it has been removed). Wouldn't I simply get a green screen if there were a contact problem on the chip ram?
CPU slot problem? Maybe that's where I need to concentrate. I will also physically pull the roms -- haven't done that yet.
Thanks again.
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I generally find the opposite; the A3000 is full of low quality IC sockets that tend to cause various issues over time.
Anyway, sounds like you've tried pretty much everything you can. The 2nd CPU board you tried - was that a known working one?
If you run out of the options, I can have a look at the board for you. A couple of years ago I developed special hardware and software to report stages of software execution in A4000 ROM during boot which makes it possible to see exactly where the machine is failing during boot. Then it's possible to proceed with a repair based on the clues it provides.
http://amiga.serveftp.net
Welcome back from Antarctica? Castellen, Hope you had an interesting time...
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Sorry to bump this year old thread, but I just had exactly the same situation that OP described, and it turned out to be something nobody mentioned yet in this thread. So for the next person to have this problem and search Google, check your VGA adapter:
Problem was caused by my VGA adapter which was just a straight cable adapter inside. When connected to my LCD monitor the A4000 displays only a dark grey screen unless I pull the chip RAM, then it shows a green screen. If I power it on with the monitor disconnected, wait a few secnds, and then plug the monitor, I see the "insert disk" animation and everything works as expected.
I was able to solder in a buffer chip to my adapter on the sync lines and now everything works fine.
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Which signal lines need the buffer chip? and what buffer chip did you use?
Where do you get the power? (from the HD15 VGA connector?)
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Sorry to bump this year old thread, but I just had exactly the same situation that OP described, and it turned out to be something nobody mentioned yet in this thread. So for the next person to have this problem and search Google, check your VGA adapter:
Problem was caused by my VGA adapter which was just a straight cable adapter inside. When connected to my LCD monitor the A4000 displays only a dark grey screen unless I pull the chip RAM, then it shows a green screen. If I power it on with the monitor disconnected, wait a few secnds, and then plug the monitor, I see the "insert disk" animation and everything works as expected.
I was able to solder in a buffer chip to my adapter on the sync lines and now everything works fine.
Certainly seems to be exactly the same symptoms. The plugging in of the monitor after booting sounds like a great trouble shooting technique. Well done!
Another is to revert to a 15khz capable Commodore monitor and standard Amiga video cable. Which I think we all assumed orb85750 was already doing. If not, and it is the same problem as you had, then it's a good reminder to always give an overview of your system and it's connectivity before relating the problem. Removes a lot of educated guessing. Even electronics professionals like Castellan can't read people's minds from a post. Face to face maybe.
I wonder if Orb85750 ever solved his problem....
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Which signal lines need the buffer chip? and what buffer chip did you use?
Where do you get the power? (from the HD15 VGA connector?)
I followed these instructions:
http://www.ntrautanen.fi/computers/hardware/misc/a4000_vga_cable.htm
Buffer goes on the sync lines only. Power comes from the Amiga monitor connector, and I used a 74LS244 chip, because I have hundreds of the things.
Here is a picture. Before modification there was only the grey wires between the two connectors.
https://plus.google.com/117474986382867317779/posts/Y4Btkm6ZVx9
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Certainly seems to be exactly the same symptoms. The plugging in of the monitor after booting sounds like a great trouble shooting technique. Well done!
Another is to revert to a 15khz capable Commodore monitor and standard Amiga video cable. Which I think we all assumed orb85750 was already doing. If not, and it is the same problem as you had, then it's a good reminder to always give an overview of your system and it's connectivity before relating the problem. Removes a lot of educated guessing. Even electronics professionals like Castellan can't read people's minds from a post. Face to face maybe.
I wonder if Orb85750 ever solved his problem....
My old 15kHz CRTs died years ago unfortunately. My nice new Dell U2410 does support 15kHz though. It even handles NTSC interlace correctly, but not PAL interlace (fields are spatially swapped).
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Here is a picture. Before modification there was only the grey wires between the two connectors.
https://plus.google.com/117474986382867317779/posts/Y4Btkm6ZVx9
Can't see it..
Perhaps a image host without all the javascript would do it?
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Can't see it..
Perhaps a image host without all the javascript would do it?
You're not missing much.
http://al.robotfuzz.com/~al/random/adapter.jpg