The VIC chip is enclosed by the metal box. How do you get it out of the socket to swap it out and see it is the problem?
Can anyone recommend an inexpensive, but useful, logic probe? I have a 100mhz frequency counter, if that is helpful.
Thanks
Herman
How do I Remove the VIC 6560 chip
Moderator: Moderators
- Mike
- Herr VC
- Posts: 5130
- Joined: Wed Dec 01, 2004 1:57 pm
- Location: Munich, Germany
- Occupation: electrical engineer
You could (have) use(d) IC extraction tools that can grip longer chips from both sides, and wiggle until the chip pops out.
As a rule of thumb, you should test a suspected defective chip in a functioning unit (i.e., VIC-20) - never the other way round. If there's something that killed your VIC in your non-working unit, it might quite as well kill your working VIC chip, and you'd just be off with *two* dead chips!
I somehow lost track over your help requests. Please could you summarize:
- how many VIC-20s you got, working/defective state and motherboard revision of each one (2-prong or DIN);
- what measuring equipment do you own (voltage, multimeter, scope, etc.);
- where you are located (it's also useful to include that information in your profile)?
As a rule of thumb, you should test a suspected defective chip in a functioning unit (i.e., VIC-20) - never the other way round. If there's something that killed your VIC in your non-working unit, it might quite as well kill your working VIC chip, and you'd just be off with *two* dead chips!
I somehow lost track over your help requests. Please could you summarize:
- how many VIC-20s you got, working/defective state and motherboard revision of each one (2-prong or DIN);
- what measuring equipment do you own (voltage, multimeter, scope, etc.);
- where you are located (it's also useful to include that information in your profile)?
- Mike
- Herr VC
- Posts: 5130
- Joined: Wed Dec 01, 2004 1:57 pm
- Location: Munich, Germany
- Occupation: electrical engineer
O.K. I read about that one in another thread. At first, let's assume the modulator is at fault here, and concentrate on the two defective VIC-20s.HermanVIC wrote:One is working through composite video.
I suppose the fuse is in order. With voltage measurement set to DC, when the power is switched on, do you get a voltage of about 5 Volts (plus/minus, say, 0.2 V) within a few tenths of seconds? If it's too high, the regulator is fried - switch off immediately before damaging other chips. If it's too low, there might be a short-circuit somewhere (but that would eventually blow the fuse).All use two prong power supply. I have multimeter [...]
Now, with the multimeter set to AC, what ripple do you measure? If it's too high (say, 0.4 V, or more) most probably the big stabilizing capacitor near to the regulator has too much ESR, and you should replace it.
Please take these two short measurements on both non-working VIC-20s and compare them against your working VIC-20, and post the results.
We'll come to that later.and frequency counter (100mhz max)

Mike BTW
The working VIC is no longer working. I tried to fix it working in normal mode without extension card by replacing two RAM chips along with sockets. I read in another post he removed the sockets and soldered directly in and the VIC is now working. These are wicked little boxes when broken. ha ha
Herman
The working VIC is no longer working. I tried to fix it working in normal mode without extension card by replacing two RAM chips along with sockets. I read in another post he removed the sockets and soldered directly in and the VIC is now working. These are wicked little boxes when broken. ha ha
Herman
VIC20 A
Blank Black screen with minimum configuration. Using a CART is the same. .001 AC across 4700 microfarad and 100 microfarad caps. I don't have enough caps for all three VICs. Will get more later. Using composite video to TV.
VIC20 B
There is a checker board pattern of random characters fill the screen in the std 3583 byte config. A CART will work and display properly. Using composite video to TV.
VIC20 C
Default minimum configuration 3583 bytes works.
CART works also. Using composite video to TV.
Blank Black screen with minimum configuration. Using a CART is the same. .001 AC across 4700 microfarad and 100 microfarad caps. I don't have enough caps for all three VICs. Will get more later. Using composite video to TV.
VIC20 B
There is a checker board pattern of random characters fill the screen in the std 3583 byte config. A CART will work and display properly. Using composite video to TV.
VIC20 C
Default minimum configuration 3583 bytes works.
CART works also. Using composite video to TV.