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Author Topic: Amiga 3000 - 7 LED Flashes and Reboot - bad Cyberstorm?  (Read 2680 times)

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Offline matt3kTopic starter

Amiga 3000 - 7 LED Flashes and Reboot - bad Cyberstorm?
« on: January 30, 2018, 01:29:48 AM »
I think my CS MKIII is on the fritz but not sure, was hoping someone out there had knowledge of this.  

It looks like the system will boot normally after you turn it on, it querys the 3000 SCSI with the scsi led flashing multiple times and then the 3000 will flash the power LED 7 times and after a delay would repeat the sequence.  You cannot double mouse click into the roms.

This happened a month ago and I replaced the 68060 and all seemed fine again.  Now it is doing it again.

If it is the CS, is it repairable?
« Last Edit: January 30, 2018, 02:06:18 AM by matt3k »
 

Offline matt3kTopic starter

Re: Amiga 3000 - 7 LED Flashes and Reboot - bad Cyberstorm?
« Reply #1 on: January 30, 2018, 12:30:04 PM »
Must be getting old.  I thought the 68060 was bad and forgot about the terrible 68060 sockets on card itself (thanks phase 5 :)).  Sure enough, the socket went bad like they always do on the MK III and the PPC.

The one thing I learned is that if the power led flashes  7 times it means bad 68060 socket.

FYI the way to test for a bad socket is to push down on the 68060 and boot the machine.
 

Offline matt3kTopic starter

Re: Amiga 3000 - 7 LED Flashes and Reboot - bad Cyberstorm?
« Reply #2 on: January 30, 2018, 08:36:35 PM »
Quote from: Whaka;835614
it's not a so common fault because of the design.
usually this happen because of extraction of the cpu. this require a special extractor to not apply force on the socket. with screwdrivers... you have to be really careful.
or if you really badly bent the pcb :D


That isn't my experience.  I have a MKIII that was in a system for years without removing the CPU or touching it and it failed.  Similarly I have a PPC that was just sitting in a machine running happily then decided to fail.  My best guess would be heat and years is the problem...

I know many people that had similar failures.  The truly crappy way that Phase 5 socketed their chips, described by Acill, is the culprit imho.