E-mu Emulator Sampler User Forum for the EIII EII EI and EIII XP

General Category => EIII Technical Issues / Tips => Topic started by: Gordon on October 25, 2010, 04:57:07 AM



Title: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: Gordon on October 25, 2010, 04:57:07 AM
Hello all,

Please accept my apologies if this has been asked many times before, but I didn't find the answer in the archive... Does anyone know where I can get an EIII repaired in the UK? Mine tries to load from floppy and shows the message "Booting from v2.42" but then stops dead and leaves a black square where the "B" should be. The internal SCSI drive appears to be completely dead.

All help much appreciated.

Many thanks,

Gordon.


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: lubb on October 25, 2010, 02:15:06 PM
If you have EIII OS 2.42 diskette, try to boot from it. (From your description I cannot fully understand if you have already tried...)


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: Gordon on October 25, 2010, 02:48:46 PM
Hello,

Yes, I have the OS 2.42 diskette, and that's the one I'm trying.

Gordon.


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: Elmbeatz on October 26, 2010, 01:33:05 AM
Did your EIII come with that disk, or have you got it from some other source?
(Hardware - specific data is saved on disks, so IF you got a disk that has been written by another EIII, something might go wrong)..


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: Gordon on October 26, 2010, 02:25:48 AM
Hello,

From another source... I bought the diskette from Rob at the Emulator Archive. I think that it had always booted before from the internal drive, which warms up when the EIII is plugged in, but doesn't rotate, so I guess is dead.

Gordon.


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: Elmbeatz on October 26, 2010, 02:54:14 AM
That's bad.
You should try to locate another floppy disk.
Where are you located?

EDIT: Oh, UK just saw it  :D


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: lubb on October 27, 2010, 05:11:55 AM
What about trying to disconnect the internal hard drive, and then boot from the diskette..? Perhaps some mess on the SCSI bus caused by the faulty hard drive...


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: Gordon on October 27, 2010, 06:36:24 AM
That's a good idea, and easy to try. I doubt that it will work :-) but it's worth a shot.

Thank you.


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: dr.c on October 28, 2010, 03:49:19 PM
This is false. Datas of the disquette and the disk are completely separated.
You should take off the microcontroler board (the top one), remove the memory simms, put them vback, put the card back and retry. Maybe just a bad contact on the memory.


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: Gordon on October 29, 2010, 04:07:00 AM
I had thought of this, but was worried about blowing a SIMM with static. But it occurs to me that we have a grounded bench where I work, so I think that I'll now try this. Many thanks everyone for the suggestions; please keep them coming. The EIII is healthier now than it was a couple of weeks ago, and who knows... we might get it back to full health.

Gordon.


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: Gordon on November 09, 2010, 05:41:55 AM
Hello all,

I opened the EIII again and, on a proper static-protected engineering bench, removed all the RAM, air-dusted everything (the contacts were very clean) and reinserted it, but backwards, just to see if this made a difference. No change.

At this point, the PSU started to complain about the dead HDD, refusing to power up when it was connected. I installed a new 45MB SCSI drive from a long-gone Mac, and everything was returned to normal.

So... On power up, the screen says "Firmware v1.00, OS2.42 Booting from floppy disk" and stops after the five 'clicks' of the floppy drive (I am assuming after five tracks are read, or after the first track is tried five times) and places a black square over the "B" of "Booting". With my other OS2.42 floppy disk, it exhibits the same behaviour, but places black squares over most of the characters on the screen.

So near, but so far. Clearly, the processor is running and the system recognises the OS on the floppy. Could it be a firmware/OS incompatibility? Any other thoughts, guys'n'gals? It's beginning to drive me mad!

Many thanks,

Gordon.


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: lubb on November 09, 2010, 07:04:28 AM
I also faced non-booting issue with my EIII Rack, and resolved it by taking everything out (flat cables, PSU cables, boards, memory chips), and cleaned all contacts with a contact cleaner... Now works flawlessly...


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: Gordon on November 09, 2010, 10:09:29 AM
Arghh!! Maybe that's the next stage. Is there anything to be especially wary of? Cracking ribbon cables? Breaking pins? Anything like that?

Gordon.


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: Gordon on November 11, 2010, 09:58:56 AM
Hello chaps,

A result, of sorts...

I have disassembled, dusted, pressed chips firmly into place, replaced the HDD and reassembled the EIII, and there are no longer any hashed screen messages on boot up. It now simply says:

SYSTEM ERROR !   UND

Any ideas? Does anyone have a service manual with the error list?

It says this for both my v2.42 floppies, so I'm wondering if the next stage is a new floppy drive, or whether people think that I've scrambled my diskettes. (My firmware is v1.00, by the way.)

I think that we might nearly be there!

Thanks as always,

Gordon.


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: midipuppies on November 11, 2010, 12:16:02 PM
Hi Gordon, I think that one means HD incompatibility. I have had the misfortune of seeing it  before. Try another HD?

Jay


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: lubb on November 11, 2010, 03:33:35 PM
The error code list is also in the user manual, but the error message you mention is not listed there.

I am only a hapless dilettante, but I do not think that "dusting" contacts is enough... There might be a strong oxidation on them. When I was rescuing my non-booting EIII, I used a cotton swab damped with a contact cleaner. It quickly became black with dirt!

Please, keep in mind, I cannot guarantee the procedure is technically correct, but it helped to me...  At least I believe so...  :)

Be extremely careful when manipulating with anything inside the unit! Above all, follow the "anti-static" rules, and MAKE SURE YOU DO NOT EXCHANGE POSITIONS OF THE RIBBON CABLES GOING TO OUTPUTS ! YOU WOULD BURN CIRCUITS !


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: Gordon on November 12, 2010, 03:17:13 AM
Sorry, I should have made it clear that the contact were bright and shiny, so I didn't want to take the risk of zapping anything unnecessarily. Your advice is good... I labelled all the ribbons and drew a plan before disconnecting, and wore an anti-static wristband.

I'm actually very encouraged by the SYSTEM ERROR !  UND message. I'll try to find a compatible HDD and see what happens next. Does anyone have any suggestions for drives?

Thanks,

Gordon.


Title: Re: Repairing an EIII in the UK
Post by: lubb on November 12, 2010, 04:03:20 PM
Proven Drives for an EIII:

Seagate ST51080N 1GB
Maxtor MXT 540S 540MB
Quantum XP31040W 1GB

I have also tried successfully two Quantums ProDrive LPS (100 and 500 MB).

But it could hardly help when your machine is not able to boot from floppy disk based OS...