T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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798.1 | My hard drive caused a similiar problem | YNOTME::WALLACE | | Tue Mar 13 1990 10:25 | 11 |
| I had a similar problem and I thought my monitor was dying when I first saw
it. Turns out the problem was caused by having the monitor sitting on top of
the hard drive I had just finish building. I assume it was caused by
interference from the switching power supply in the hard drive.
I couldn't tell you how to fix it except for to move the sound module. Moving
the hard drive off to the side a little helped in my case and getting two feet
away cured the problem. You could try moving the module below the ST if that
is more doable then moving it horizontally.
Ray
|
798.2 | Could be the cables | SICKO::PATTERSON | Engaged to a Redhead | Tue Mar 13 1990 14:09 | 14 |
| re .0
If the problem is from power feed back, you could try:
1) making sure all your stuff is well grounded.
2) Put the Monitor and the Midi stuff on different circuits
If the problem is from interfence, then try:
1) Put some aluminium foil between the two.
2) Move the cables from them so they(the cables) are as far
apart as possible.
Jim Patterson
|
798.3 | probably power supply/xfmr B field coupling | ACE::BREWER | John Brewer Component Engr. @ABO | Tue Mar 13 1990 16:57 | 10 |
|
It is probably radiated fields coupling into the monitor...
Placing a shield of metal (grounded) may very well help... or if
it coupling in on the cables, try some of the Rat Shack clamp-on
RF chokes...
It wont cause any reliability problems to the monitor however,
if that is a concern...
/john
|
798.4 | HMMMMMMMMMMMMMM | SEDOAS::WATT | It's Life Jim but not as we know it | Wed Mar 14 1990 07:24 | 5 |
| Is there a fan in it ?? If there is then that is your problem, however
it could also be the transformer. There isn't really any easy fix
other than moveing the devices away from the monitor.
Peter
|
798.5 | | MGOI03::FALKENSTEIN | | Wed Mar 14 1990 11:21 | 6 |
|
I faced similar problems. Reversing the polarity of the power plug
did it (don't ask me why).
Bernd
|
798.6 | | PRNSYS::LOMICKAJ | Jeffrey A. Lomicka | Wed Mar 14 1990 12:39 | 6 |
| My monitor image bounces around whenever the iron thermostat kicks in,
when the iron is on the same circuit.
It also will wiggle if you place any live transformer too close to it.
The magnetic field of the transformer will interfere with the path of
the electrons.
|
798.7 | ok now | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Thu Mar 15 1990 15:58 | 5 |
| Problem solved. I swapped the Kurzweil with another module and no more problem.
Thanks
Chad
|
798.8 | | DAVIDS::KUBELKA | David Kubelka, Valbonne 828-5421 | Wed Mar 21 1990 08:05 | 1 |
| I thing the Kurzweil is only Class B, whatever that means.
|
798.9 | | PRNSYS::LOMICKAJ | Jeffrey A. Lomicka | Wed Mar 21 1990 09:48 | 8 |
| "only class B" means that it conforms to the most stringent level of
radio frequency emissions limits established by the Fedral
Communications Commission in the U.S. I think only Germany's VDE has
more stringent limits than FCC class B, but I'm not sure of even that.
These are high frequency limits. Chad's problem is a low frequency
60hz thing.
|
798.10 | VDE - what is it? | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Wed Mar 21 1990 13:30 | 9 |
| >Communications Commission in the U.S. I think only Germany's VDE has
>more stringent limits than FCC class B, but I'm not sure of even that.
What is "Germany's VDE" (what does VDE stand for -- German words are fine)
thanks
Chad
|
798.11 | | PRNSYS::LOMICKAJ | Jeffrey A. Lomicka | Wed Mar 21 1990 14:35 | 3 |
| Look on the bottom of your DEC keyboard - just under the FCC ID number
is the words "Funkentstvrt nach allgemeiner Genehmigung 529/1970 (VDE
0871 Klasse B). Loosely speaking, VDE is German for "FCC":-).
|
798.12 | this one for the folks on the other side of the pond | NORGE::CHAD | Ich glaube Ich t�te Ich h�tte | Wed Mar 21 1990 16:22 | 12 |
| Yeah, but what does it mean (I mean in German)?
Here is go just matching words to letters, not based on any knowledge
VDE
Verein Deutscher Elektrotechniker = (would be if this were to exist)
Organization of German Elctrical Engineers
Chad
|
798.13 | right | MGOI02::FALKENSTEIN | | Thu Mar 22 1990 03:09 | 12 |
|
definitely correct!
VDE = Verein deutscher Elektrotechniker (Technicians)
VDI = Verein deutscher Ingenieure (Engineers)
where VDE makes the rules for working with electro/electronic stuff,
and VDI is a community of engineers of all resorts.
Bernd
|
798.14 | ;^) | SICKO::PATTERSON | Engaged to a Redhead | Thu Mar 22 1990 13:29 | 7 |
| re. -1
And, to think, I always assumed VDI was Vertical Display Interupt.
Oh, well.
Jim
|
798.15 | another one | MGOI01::FALKENSTEIN | so many girls, so little time... | Mon Nov 19 1990 10:08 | 18 |
|
Now I have a problem with my monitor. In a former reply I suggested to
turn the power connector, this doesn't help anymore.
Since a few days I have a ripple and flimmer on my original Atari
monitor. Nothing changed in the configuration at that day, no equipment
with magnetic fields in the near. I tested the shielding of the cable,
I took the monitor apart and looked for the shielding there, everything
ok. In former days I had this symptom as soon as the washing machine
started to heat, now it's all the time. The strange thing about is that
the problem occured from one day to another without changing or adding
equipment. The monitor works ok on my brother-in-law's Atari. My color
monitor also works without any problems. Could it be that this is
caused by the weak 1040' power supply which has to feed 4MB memory and
two internal 3.5 drives? (I have the computer in a tower box far away
from monitor and keyboard). Any hints where to check?
Bernd
|
798.16 | cable shielding to color monitor! | MGOI01::FALKENSTEIN | so many girls, so little time... | Mon Nov 19 1990 14:36 | 13 |
|
To answer my own quAt home I did a bit more testing and by tand
accidentely I disconnected the color monitor from the Atari (I have both
monitors connected simultaniously, they are switched by the monochrom
detect line internally with a switch) and the flimmer went away. Now
I inspected the cable and found out that the shielding was connected
to ground on both sides of the cable. Di the shielding on
the monitor's side of the cable did the fix! I only can't understand
why this problem occured so instantly. The cable was that way since
months.
Bernd
|
798.17 | Could it be you had the color monitor turned on? | YNOTME::WALLACE | | Mon Nov 19 1990 16:55 | 5 |
| If I have my color monitor powered on when I am using the monochrome monitor,
then the monochrome monitor's display gets the shakes. As long as the color
monoitor is turned off the monochrome display is fine.
Ray
|
798.18 | in both states | MGOI02::FALKENSTEIN | so many girls, so little time... | Tue Nov 20 1990 08:25 | 12 |
|
first, sorry for the typos in my last reply. I had a bad modem
connection.
re. -1
the flimmer occured both with power on and power off at the color
monitor. Just removing the connector removed the shakey screen.
I disconnected the shielding from ground at the monitor side and
the display got way better.
Bernd
|
798.19 | | VISUAL::WEAVER | Dave, Image Systems Group | Fri Nov 30 1990 19:01 | 7 |
| You might have a ground fault somewhere in your electrical wiring. You can
pick up outlet checkers pretty cheap at Radio Shack that have a set of LEDs
on them to tell whether or not there are problems with the household wiring.
Did you happen to change what wall plugs things were plugged into recently?
-Dave
|
798.20 | old power lines | MGOI03::FALKENSTEIN | so many girls, so little time... | Sun Dec 02 1990 09:49 | 12 |
|
that might be the problem. I'm living in an relatively old house
where they didn't have a three-wire power line with external ground
at that time.
The only things added lately to the power outlet were a desktop clock
and the modem.
In the way the monitor looks now (with the disconnected shielding on
the color monitor's side) I can live with. It's far better now.
Thanks for all the suggestions! Anyway I'll try to get those testers.
Bernd
|
798.21 | Monitor, Floppy, DMA-problem | UFHIS::BFALKENSTEIN | | Mon Mar 25 1991 03:19 | 44 |
|
I'm facing a strange problem with my computer these days. All started
when I extended the cable lenght of my mono monitor. In the first run
I had a solid picture as long as the background was white, like in a
complete open window. So every black and white parts were ok, only the
desktop with it's dark or grey parts had alternating dark and light
vertical stripes, each about 2-3 cm in width. During examination of
the symptom the screen suddenly went completely dark. A bit scared
about the life of the GLUE (which is SMD and I can't replace on my own)
I shut off and put that original monitor cable back.
Then I tried a reboot. Desktop came up with no icons at all.
I disconnected the DMA connector and rebooted. After a while I had that
message on the screen that the computer couldn't access drive A with
the choice to Ignore, Abort or Retry. GEM was not started by now.
Next I swapped the floppy in drive A and did another boot. This time
the computer came up just fine with the two floppy icons and the
trashcan. I checked out the floppy which was previously in the drive
and couldn't access it because the bootsector was somehow damaged (the
floppy certainly worked ok before).
Now I wanted to check out some software to insure that everything is
ok, except that I still had no HD access (no icons as soon as the
computer is booted with connected DMA, no matter if the HD is powered
on or off). After a while the information on my screen went away. I
still had a light rectangle in the middle of my monitor with sharp
edges to the black borders, but in that window everything went crazy.
You could imagine that something at the top of that window looked like
a menu-bar, but it looked like it would move very rapidly in horizontal
direction behind kind of "fog". First I thougth the Sync information
from the GLUE passed out, but in that case I believe I had no stable
window in the middle of the screen of which just the contens seem to
go crazy.
So this is the status of my computer in the moment. Btw if I happen to
boot that thing ok from floppy and have to reset for any given reason,
after the reset the screen always looks like described above.
Any ideas besides swapping the GLUE? (next time I buy a computer I let
the dealer open up that thing and show me that not a single SMD chip is
on the board!!! I really don't know why Atari did this, lots of space
on that motherboard.)
Bernd
|
798.22 | Some places to look | PRNSYS::LOMICKAJ | Jeffrey A. Lomicka | Mon Mar 25 1991 10:41 | 4 |
| Try the video shifter - it's socketed in all system I have seen, a
40-pin DIP inside a separate RF cage.
This could also be RAM.
|
798.23 | Picture ok, HD still down | UFHIS::BFALKENSTEIN | | Thu Mar 28 1991 02:51 | 9 |
|
Yup, the Video Shifter was the problem. Not completely down, but
somehow "weak".
Takes a load off me (still getting goose bumps when thinking of the
@#$%-GLUE) ;-)
Thanks,
Bernd
|
798.24 | | PRNSYS::LOMICKAJ | Jeffrey A. Lomicka | Thu Mar 28 1991 09:40 | 4 |
| Okay, now replace the DMA controller chip, another Atari-specific
40-pin socketed chip, and you should be all set.
(I'm starting to think I've fixed too many of these.)
|
798.25 | DMA chip is ok, OS trouble??? | UFHIS::BFALKENSTEIN | | Tue Apr 02 1991 11:03 | 23 |
|
Now, it looks like it was not a problem of the DMA controller chip, but
of the operating system I installed last week.
The situation was that I had no working HD at that time because I still
needed some GALs for the SCSI host adapter. The adapter and the HD was
connected, but without power when I had that said symptom. So I got
no icons when booting the system with the adapter connected, but
everything was ok with a disconnected DMA cable.
During Easter I connected the drive of a friend and could boot up just
fine from disk, so the DMA chip obviously is ok. But when I tried to
boot from floppy with a shut-off HD and the DMA cable connected, just
the same thing happened. As soon as I disconnected the cable and
rebooted, everything was ok again.
So it seems that with the version of KAOS I have, published in a mag
last year and programmed into EPROMs, it is not possible to boot up the
system with a connected powerless HD, nor is it possible to switch the
HD on after bootup and run AHDI to make it known to the system.
Thanks anyway for the hint, Jeff, but I rather like this solution than
to solder out a 40-pin chip and put another new one in.
Bernd
|
798.26 | | PRNSYS::LOMICKAJ | Jeffrey A. Lomicka | Wed Apr 03 1991 14:17 | 4 |
| A powered off device on the DMA port may present an unreasonable load
to the DMA controller or to the other devices on the DMA data bus, such
as the floppy controller. It is generally a bad idea to try to run with
powered-off devices on the DMA port.
|
798.27 | No powered off device at DMA port! | COL01::LELIE | I/O in progress | Thu Apr 04 1991 03:06 | 12 |
| re: <<< Note 798.26 by PRNSYS::LOMICKAJ "Jeffrey A. Lomicka" >>>
> as the floppy controller. It is generally a bad idea to try to run with
> powered-off devices on the DMA port.
DONT'T DO IT. I learned it the hard way: while my powered-off hard disk
stayed connected, I had a program running which wrote to the diskette.
Only one night long. Program worked fine. BUT when I tried to read the
data from diskette, that file contained junk, the directory contained
junk, and most of the other files contained junk. It took me a lot of
work to restaurate (most) of 4 weeks of temperature data. Now I disconnect
the hard disk when I use the ST with floppy alone.
|
798.28 | Never again! | UFHIS::BFALKENSTEIN | | Thu Apr 04 1991 04:31 | 15 |
|
Good to know! And I was wondering why I couldn't even format that
floppy after I had those troubles last week. I had to trow it away!
This was the first time ever I had a powered off device on the DMA
port because of those three missing chips in the adapter, and I didn't
wanted to disconnect all the cables in the tower case (due to space
problems they're hard to access). Now I know that I should spend a
little more work to protect my hardware during upgrades/changes.
I think this is a good hint in this place for other users also, I
learned my lesson! (I was close to a heart failure :-) )
Thanks again,
Bernd
|