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Classic Series Power Supply Schematic? - Printable Version +- HP Forums (https://archived.hpcalc.org/museumforum) +-- Forum: HP Museum Forums (https://archived.hpcalc.org/museumforum/forum-1.html) +--- Forum: Old HP Forum Archives (https://archived.hpcalc.org/museumforum/forum-2.html) +--- Thread: Classic Series Power Supply Schematic? (/thread-110752.html) |
Classic Series Power Supply Schematic? - Daniel Weed - 03-22-2007 Hi all, Anyone have a schematic for the power supply of the classic series (HP-35, 45, 55)? Not the power brick, but the internal supply which converts Vbsw to Vcc (+8.2V), Vss(+6V) and Vgg (-12V). I am wanting to repair an HP-45 and after metering the internal voltages at the testpoints, it looks like that's where the problem is. Thanks, -- Dan
Re: Classic Series Power Supply Schematic? - Tony Duell - 03-23-2007 I've traced out full schematics of just about all the old HP handhelds. They're available on the HPCC schematics CD-ROM (see the obvious web site for details). This CD-ROM is produced by Dave Colver, the HPCC secretary. If you ask him nicely (I believe contact details are on the same site), he might e-mail you just the schematic for your machine. My experience suggests that the 35 PSU schematic is somewhat different to the later ones (the later ones have a zener diode in the regulator circuit, the 35 one that I've seen simply sets Vss to be a certain multiple of the battery voltage).
Incidentally, if you're getting no outputs at all, most of the time it's the oscillator transistor that's failed. A 2N3904 is a suitable replacement. If you're getting excessive ripple on one of the outputs, or if the Vgg line is crazy, I'd suspect the electrolytic capacitors.
Re: Classic Series Power Supply Schematic? - dan - 03-23-2007 Thanks. I sent a note to Dave. Looks like this is a flyback converter with the oscillator circuit to the left, 3 windings on the transformer, and 2.2 uF capacitor/diode circuits to the right providing the voltages. On the oscillator circuit there appear to be two transistors, both Motorola, labeled 4-094 and 4-550 (NPN and PNP?). I tried looking up these part numbers but didn't find anything. It also has a 60uF cap. Usually the least reliable components would be the capacitors. But I would agree if the oscillator is dead the transistors may be the problem. So far I've only hooked it up to a multimeter. This weekend I'll scope it to see what I find. Also I took the board and scanned both sides on a flatbed scanner at a ridiculously high DPI in case I decide to try to reverse engineer this thing myself. With all of the gold plating and the gold/ceramic Mostek chips, this board is a real work of art. I'm half tempted to frame the picture. Any other thoughts or related experiences are welcome.
-- Dan
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