T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1451.1 | 8520 | FSDEV1::JBERNARD | John Bernard YWO/292-2591 | Wed Jun 01 1988 09:15 | 9 |
| Yup, went through the same thing. I'd suggest the 8520. Memory
Location has them in stock. If you're desperate and can't find
one, I think I have a good one lying around somewhere you can have
until you find one.
They run around $20 and are VERY succeptable to static electricity.
John
|
1451.2 | 8520 | WJG::GUINEAU | | Wed Jun 01 1988 13:58 | 7 |
|
Thanks John. I haven't taken it apart yet. What is the full part number
and manufacturer of the 8520?
John
|
1451.3 | I'd check the 1489 first anyway | MANTIS::LONG | | Wed Jun 01 1988 16:19 | 9 |
| There has been a lot of talk on USENET about the 8520 going away so this is
probably the most likely place to start looking. As an owner myself,I would
have prefered to see the 1489 go before a bad line spike could make it through
to my more valuable chips. Looks like my next hardware project will be to
put opto-isolation on some of these connectors :^{
hopin' to keep my 1000 alive for a lot longer,
Dick
|
1451.4 | ... | WINNER::JBERNARD | John Bernard YWO/292-2591 | Wed Jun 01 1988 16:39 | 5 |
| Near as I can tell, the 8520 is a CBM chip. I forgot to ask.. do
you have a 500 or a 1000? I was assuming a 500. If not then my
diagnosis may be at fault (i.e. 1488/1489 chip is about $1).
|
1451.5 | | WJG::GUINEAU | | Wed Jun 01 1988 16:47 | 13 |
|
> have prefered to see the 1489 go before a bad line spike could make it through
> to my more valuable chips. Looks like my next hardware project will be to
Me too. And I think if it was a spike on the RX data and TX data the 1488/1489
chips would get the hit. But the other control lines (CTS,DTR, DSR, etc..) go
directly to the 8520 chips - no "little" chips in between...
John
|
1451.6 | | WJG::GUINEAU | | Wed Jun 01 1988 16:49 | 18 |
|
RE .4
It's an A500. I think the 8520 is reasonable, since it is virtually
unprotected on all control lines (DTR, CTS etc).
I tried calling Active (Westboro, Ma) and they had no mention of "8520".
I'll try the memory location...
(This is a *real* bummer. I can't even use the modem. Oh Well, at least the
printer works for now...)
John
|
1451.7 | progress | WJG::GUINEAU | | Fri Jun 03 1988 15:31 | 27 |
|
I called the Memory Location. They have 8520's in stock at $22.00.
I also called the store where I purchased my Amiga (General Computer Store,
Framingham, Mass). He told me to call D5 Associates in Bedford Mass.
D5 Assoc. is a Commodore repair shop. The also stock all the Amiga custom
chips:
8520 $18.75
Paula 63.00
Agnes 50.25
Denise 58.90
The guy at Memory Location said the problem is either (80% probability) 8520
or (20%) Paula.
The guy at D5 says 90% 8520, 10% Paula. (I hope Paula's OK!!!)
D5 also said he has heard rumors of FAT AGNUS being $200.00! They will
stock them when availiable.
Anyway, I'll pick up an 8520 and try it.
John
|
1451.8 | and the winner is... | WJG::GUINEAU | | Mon Jun 06 1988 08:51 | 16 |
|
Well, I picked up an 8520 Friday. Drove home, plugged it in, and no go :-(
So I decided I would bring the whole machine to D5 Associates on Saturday.
I must have spent the night dreaming, cause I was up at 7:00 Saturday morning
with my logic probe and a volt meter (crude huh? only equipment I have at home!)
Turned out to be the 1489 RS232 reciever chip - $1.29 at Radio Shack!
Now Amy talks serial again...
John
|
1451.9 | Preventive Maintenance | DPDMAI::ANDERSONA | | Tue Jun 07 1988 22:35 | 14 |
| This may be late but I make it a habit to always unplug the AC line
cord from the wall and only plug in the modem to the phone line
when I want to use it. This may be a hassel but its cheaper then
fixing it. If you don't have a power strip with surge suppresors
you can pick some up from Radio shack. Three per power strip will
do it. Hot to Gnd, Hot to Neutral, and Neutral to Gnd. Then replace
them every year or two. If you need an indication on how often
to replace them just observe you house lights while the AC cycles.
Lots of blinks replace yearly few blinks every two years. Its
all guess work.
My two cents
Alan
|
1451.10 | Same problem? | AGNESI::MARK | Waltzing with Bears | Fri Jun 16 1989 16:23 | 12 |
| Last night I noticed the same problem described in .0. I was sending
stuff to the modem just fine, but not recieving anything. Tried another modem.
No change. Tried a VAX terminal drop (unpluged the cable to the modem, and
pluged it into the null-modem cable comming from the VAX). That Worked fine!
Tried with the modems. No good. Plugged the modems into a VT220. They're
fine. Plugged the Amiga back into the VAX. That still works.
This is a year and a half old B2000, that worked fine up until last
night. Any clues?
Thanks,
Mark
|
1451.11 | use meter on amiga on pin6 | ANT::JANZEN | cf. ANT::CIRCUITS,ANT::UWAVES | Fri Jun 16 1989 17:14 | 6 |
| The null modem cable bypasses modem control lines such as
clear to send, requrest to send, data set ready, and data terminal
ready.
These lines may be asserted or something, like data terminal ready
might be de-asserted.
tom
|
1451.12 | | AGNESI::MARK | Waltzing with Bears | Fri Jun 16 1989 18:06 | 5 |
| Re:.11
At least DTR is asserted (the modem shows it that way).
Mark
|
1451.13 | Some help perhaps? | MQOFS::LEDOUX | Reserved for Future Use | Mon Jun 19 1989 14:24 | 15 |
|
I had a similar problem at a customer site, the failure was
(in his case) a RS232 driver/receiver chip that was busted. The chip
was working when a VT100 was plugged in but a DMF32 async
port wasn't. RS232 should work from 15 volts (+/-) to 5 volts.
But I saw SOME working at 3 volts. (out of specs).
Some will, some won't....
Being at your place I would get a scope and look at the amplitude
of the signal. You would probably see a difference when you plug
the VT200 and the modem. Make sure the signals are within spec.
(On my Amiga I use the DECconnect type to my modem or printer.)
Good luck.
|