Update and Pictures: It's been a hell of a day! HP 9845/2x

Andreas Holz asholz at topinform.de
Wed May 18 08:37:45 CDT 2005


Hello,

the PSU's of the 9845 are always a pain.

Esp. for the 9845s produced in Germany once, at first all capacitors 
have to been checked before applying power. Several of them are of an 
epoxy based package and like to produce a failure of the PSU (I killed 
two PSUs up to now and I'm not daring to power on the third).

>>   I checked the HP 9845B and it's absolutely dead. The fan doesn't even
>>run. However the fault should be easy enough to locate. It's odd though,
>>    
>>
>
>Be warned that thr 9845 PSU is _very_ complicated, even worse than the 
>PDP11/44 PSU (!).
>
>Anyway, the input circuit isn't too bad. There's a mains-frequency 
>transformer (the laminated-core one on the metal bracket) that has 2 
>primary windings. They're in series for 230V, in paralell for 115V. The 
>output of this transformer provides the startup supply. There's also the 
>conventional bridge/doubler circuit with the 2 massive capacitors in the 
>middle of the PSU mainboard to supply 350V DC to the choppers
>
>Anyway, the fans are connected in parallel with the startup transformer 
>primaries. So on 115V they're essentially connected across the mains. 
>There is a fuse at the back (10A IIRC for 115V) that I'd check first, 
>otherwise look at the wiring on the back panel, the barrier strip on the 
>side of the PSU casing (be warned that the screws that hold the cover 
>over that go into loose nuts inside the PSU casing, so pull the PSU 
>module first), etc. This is one of the not-too-complicated parts of the 
>machine.
>  
>
As you seem to know the PSU quite well, do you have schematics?

Andreas


More information about the cctalk mailing list