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Author Topic: Help needed to convert A500 PSU for CD32!  (Read 1506 times)

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Offline StevenJGoreTopic starter

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Help needed to convert A500 PSU for CD32!
« on: December 05, 2003, 12:18:54 PM »
Hi,

I've just got my hands on a 60W A500 PSU which I'm trying to convert for use with my CD32 with SX32 Pro, hard disk, and floppy drive, which are putting a strain on the standard 17W CD32 PSU.

I've opened up both PSU's to swap the whole length of the power cables (to make it neater). I've stripped back the wire and have the following:

CD32: Brown Red Yellow Black
A500: Brown Red Yellow Black White
In both cases, the red and black wires are thicker.

Can I just do a simple Brown>Brown, Red>Red, Yellow>Yellow, Black>Black with terminal blocks, and does it matter about there being no White (or equivalent) going to the CD32?

I've found pin-out guides on the web, but they don't describe the colours of cables.

Any help appreciated!

Thanks,
Steve.
 

Offline StevenJGoreTopic starter

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Re: Help needed to convert A500 PSU for CD32!
« Reply #1 on: December 05, 2003, 12:29:25 PM »
Quote
Get a multimeter / continuity tester.


I don't have one, but I've got a screwdriver which lights up when it touches live wires, if that will do?!!

Quote
Check what wire goes to what pin on the connector and note it down.


Already tried this, but there's a huge block of glue around the connector inside the plastic coating, and it's not possible to see which wire goes to which pin.
 

Offline StevenJGoreTopic starter

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Re: Help needed to convert A500 PSU for CD32!
« Reply #2 on: December 05, 2003, 01:39:17 PM »
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This is where the continuity tester comes in handy. You don't need to brutalize the connector as you just touch one probe to one of the pins of the connector and then try the other probe onto the wires in turn.


Doh! I can't believe I didn't think of that! All I need to do is take a torch apart to break the circuit, temporarily attach two wires with the torch switched on, and I have a homemade continuity detector! I should then be able to work out which wire is which using the pin-out diagrams on the net.

Cheers!   :-)