the coin cell is the regular CMOS battery, and the other battery is for standby mode, I think. it probably maintains the RAM contents during a main battery swap.
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the coin cell is the regular CMOS battery, and the other battery is for standby mode, I think. it probably maintains the RAM contents during a main battery swap. 172 comments
@tubetime Problems solved by whacking with hammer: *adds one to the tally* @tubetime I'm not sure, but I think your sheet size is a tad bit too small for your schematic
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@tubetime Huh? On a power supply board? What sub-circuit are these resistors part of? @attilakinali there are 7 of them. they trim the output voltages and a few other parameters @tubetime interesting. I would have thought that 1% resistors would do the job for the voltage feedback of something like a computer. Any idea why they need this level of accuracy? @attilakinali 1% is indeed fine for this. but they probably thought doing it this way was some sort of competitive advantage lol ok i have a theory about why this was failing. symptoms: randomly the computer would shut off and pull a ton of current... 1) crowbar circuit fires. it can fire due to a rail going overvoltage... 2) a buck converter's MOSFET wasn't switching properly... 3) oh look this diode wasn't connected anymore due to a bad via! want to stare at the schematic yourself? i've put it on GitHub. https://github.com/schlae/Thinkpad700CPower
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I just checked and (thankfully) CHM doesn't have one. They actually have almost no ThinkPads in the collection. I have nightmares about how many early 90s machines in the collection have pcb rot. @tubetime I had totally forgotten about active vs passive matrix displays! The minute I saw an IBM active matrix LCD, I knew the end was nigh for the CRT. It was amazing for its time. @tubetime Active matrix, man. A million psychedelic colors... I bet it looks crispy in the dark. @tubetime Others have speculated in the past that IBM used Nextel Suede coating. https://www.nextel-coating.com/produkt/nextel-suede-coating-3101-90fh-11-black/?lang=en&v=3a52f3c22ed6. I am not sure if that info is correct. Difficult to get in the USA and $$$. I know folks who may have very limited quantities (used on aircraft instrument panels), may be the wrong color or variant. @jonhendry by shining a flashlight through the board and looking at the shadow of the trace. if it is more distant or fuzzy, then it's on the opposite side of the aluminum core @tubetime I'm guessing they trimmed to tune the system as a whole, not just the single resistor value? @tubetime My first job out of school was doing fpga stuff at a company that did laser trimming. It was wild. They used analog circuits to drive the galvos which had the mirrors. If the circuitry was off by a bit, you could see the “ringing” of the circuits in the right angle cuts (instead of an angle you’d see a little degrading sine wave). I’m still convinced analog EE’s are wizards. @tubetime the one and only time I soldered directly to a coin cell it exploded in my face. Never again! @tubetime You need a small spot welder in your arsenal (and so do I) @tubetime I’m too scared to do that, so I use electrical tape to tape the wires to the cell (plus cover the whole thing with said tape so it looks similar to the original) @tubetime Wow, didn’t know these were repairable. I had a Dell Inspiron that was infamous for the hinges getting stiff, cracking the bezel , and pushing their way right through. |
i should mention how i fixed the very stiff hinges in the Thinkpad 700C. i supported the hinge and hit the shaft with a hammer (red arrow). this backed out the locking washer and reduced the pressure on the hinge stack, and therefore the friction.