11/45 revisited

Tony Duell ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk
Sat Mar 10 16:04:39 CST 2007


> 
> I was looking at the power control board for the H742A (5409730) that is 
> supposed to be putting out my +15v. I couldn't find any schematics on this 
> board but the system engineering prints appear to indicate they should be 

They're in my PDP11/45 printset. 

> present. In the absence of schematics (and any obvious scorching) I figured 
> the likely first thing to check is the sole TO-3 power transistor on the 
> board. Sure enough, the C-E junction is shorted so at the least I'll need 
> one of those.

Did you test it out-of-circuit? It's a power darlington (read : high 
current gain) and there's a fairly low resistor (100 ohms -- 2 off 200 
ohm in parallel) between C and B. It's quite possible an in-circuit test 
will show it as shorted.

 
> 1) The critter is Motorola "DEC3000" which I'm betting is a DEC house part 
> number (since ECG xref shows nothing && it starts with DEC). Can anyone clue 
> me in to what part that really is?

The pritn I have shows it (Q1) as an MJ1000

> 
> 2) Are the schematics for 5409730 around so I can try to understand it a 
> little better?

I can describe the circuit for you..

Firstly a sort-of layout ; 

With the PCB so that Q1 is at the bottom right, and the fat electrolytic 
capacitor is on the far left, then : 

That capacitor is C1. Alongside it, towareds the bottom of the board are 
2 small transsistors. Q2 is near the bottom edge, Q3 jsut above it. Then 
thers's Q1, the To3 can on the heatsink

Above Q3, roughtlu on a line with the top of that capacitor C1 is a 
bridge rectifier, D1. And alongisde that is a fuse, F1

The rest of the compoonents on the board are part of the ACLO and DCLO 
circuits.

Now, for a circuit description of the +15V supply. 

30V AC comes in on pins 3 and 4 of J1 (the 4 pin connector on the board). 
It's rectified by D1, and smoothed by C1. The +ve side of that capacitor 
then gores to the fuse F1.

Nwo, the regualators is quite conventional. It consists of a 16V zener 
with that 100 Ohm resistor arrangement I mentioned feeding it from the 
outpt of C1. Q1 acts as an emttier-follower, and buffers the output of 
the zener circuit to provide the +15V line to the rest of the machine.

Now for the unconventional part. Q3 and Q2 form a circuit that disables 
the +15V supply (shorts out the zener, effectively) if the DCLO line -- 
the 'spaer one' on pin 9 of J4 (the conencotr wired to the PCB) -- is 
aserted. 

So, what I'd do is ; Check F1. If it's OK. power up and check the voltage 
on the +ve side of C1 wrt the system ground rail. You should have 30-40V 
here. If you do, check the base voltage of Q1. If that's 16V, and you 
still ahve no output, suspect Q1. But if that's essentially 0V, check Q2 
and Q3, and if they're OK, it's time to check back into the DCLO circuit.

-tony


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