Some more of Magnetic's 4000. Today I had to remove U177, U975 and U976 so I could clean up under them. U177 is part of the clock circuit and its toast. Luckily it and its other chip above you will see in the last photo can be out of the circuit and the 4000 still functions, just with no clock functionality. You can also see how bad the traces coming off U177 and around it are. They will have to be repaired eventualy if I want to get it working I am sure. My meter isnt working well and I am having a hard time tracing them out to see just how bad they really are.
Chips removed. You can see the real bad traces off to the left from U177

Closer view of the area near U177

U975 and U976 removed. Not quite as bad, but still needed to be replaced with new chips just to be sure.

Cleaned up as best as its going to get and fluxed up for new chips to go down.

New replacements soldered into place

This is the clock chip socket. I removed the chip and well to test the socket for any bad pins and the socket itself. It seemed to be okay.

I still dont have the two 8MB simms in yet to test the simm sockets I replaced. I cant get it to boot because the chip RAM is all I have to use and it runs out of memory and fails to boot from HD. If I boot from a 3.1 floppy it goes to WB and shows only 285,000 free chip RAM. Hope thats correct, but we will see. This is by far the most challenging board I have had in for a long time.