Hi.
Board have:
7x2200uF/6,3V
3x1800uF/6,3V
Can i use straight 10x 2200uf like Panasonic EEU-FR0J222B?
This is my weird retro project.
Maybe any ideas about poly cap replacement?
APSC6R3ELL222MJB5T
https://www.digikey.be/product-detai...198-ND/3998084
					Board have:
7x2200uF/6,3V
3x1800uF/6,3V
Can i use straight 10x 2200uf like Panasonic EEU-FR0J222B?
This is my weird retro project.
Maybe any ideas about poly cap replacement?
APSC6R3ELL222MJB5T
https://www.digikey.be/product-detai...198-ND/3998084
 
							
						

 Awesome!
 Awesome! ) Because the KA7500 PWM IC has very low switching frequency (less than 50 KHz, likely, if even that), ESR does not matter as much as capacitance does in this circuit. So keeping the output capacitors to what they were originally is recommended. Going higher in capacitance won't hurt. But going lower in capacitance (for example, due to using polymers) may actually increase noise and lower over-clocking abilities (not that this board is known to have any, but still.
 ) Because the KA7500 PWM IC has very low switching frequency (less than 50 KHz, likely, if even that), ESR does not matter as much as capacitance does in this circuit. So keeping the output capacitors to what they were originally is recommended. Going higher in capacitance won't hurt. But going lower in capacitance (for example, due to using polymers) may actually increase noise and lower over-clocking abilities (not that this board is known to have any, but still.  )
 ) Can you imagine this was the CPU in my first own daily use PC? At the time, I thought it was decent... until later I realized it was low-end even for its time. But it got the job done, though. So many good memories on that PC.
 Can you imagine this was the CPU in my first own daily use PC? At the time, I thought it was decent... until later I realized it was low-end even for its time. But it got the job done, though. So many good memories on that PC.  Oh, and POST code where it gets stuck is NOT "d3" as I mentioned above, but rather "dE". When that happens, the board sits on it for about 3-4 seconds, then resets (my POST card shows BUS activity), waits momentarily on "d3" for about a second, then gets stuck on "dE" again... and ad-infinitum. Also, when the board resets, the Caps Lock key unlocks and I can toggle it until motherboard freezes on "dE" again. So the motherboard is definitely trying to POST with the DDR sticks.
 Oh, and POST code where it gets stuck is NOT "d3" as I mentioned above, but rather "dE". When that happens, the board sits on it for about 3-4 seconds, then resets (my POST card shows BUS activity), waits momentarily on "d3" for about a second, then gets stuck on "dE" again... and ad-infinitum. Also, when the board resets, the Caps Lock key unlocks and I can toggle it until motherboard freezes on "dE" again. So the motherboard is definitely trying to POST with the DDR sticks. ) Same goes for RAM Vtt voltage: it's a bit low at barely 1.2V. Normally, I see it on other boards at 1.25 to 1.3V (i.e. half of 2.55 or 2.6V) Makes me wonder if some component in the RAM detection circuit has drifted out of value. Given that the board uses a 1084 regulator for the RAM, I'm thinking I might try to manually drive the DDR voltage to see what happens. On the other hand, it's a cool classic board, so maybe not worth the risk. Might get some cheap China 512 MB sticks of SDRAM for it instead and call it a day.
 ) Same goes for RAM Vtt voltage: it's a bit low at barely 1.2V. Normally, I see it on other boards at 1.25 to 1.3V (i.e. half of 2.55 or 2.6V) Makes me wonder if some component in the RAM detection circuit has drifted out of value. Given that the board uses a 1084 regulator for the RAM, I'm thinking I might try to manually drive the DDR voltage to see what happens. On the other hand, it's a cool classic board, so maybe not worth the risk. Might get some cheap China 512 MB sticks of SDRAM for it instead and call it a day. 
 
							
						
Comment