
At first I had hoped that it may just be the RF modulator that had failed, but after finding a DIN plug and soldering a new video cable up it still does not generate readable text. I have attached a screenshot of what it does when booted up. Basically vertical lines bending over to the right at the top of the frame.
The machine (a later model Vic with the C64 style PSU) seems to be booting up properly. If I type LOAD, and then press play on tape and then RUN/STOP the cassette stops turning. If I then type LOAD again with the play button already down the tape starts up again. I'd assume this means the CPU and BASIC is at least working? I tested the PSU with my meter and it also seems to be producing the right voltage (about 5.2v DC and 9.6v AC)
I also own a PET/CBM 4032 so I removed the 6502 from the Vic and booted the PET with the Vic's CPU and it worked perfectly. I took the risk of booting the Vic with the PET's 6502 but it made no difference.
I also have 2 game carts for the Vic (Avengers and Cosmic Jailbreak) and if I boot the machine with those inserted and then press F1 (which I figured out is necessary to start the game from VICE) I hear sound effects and I can hear that the game is running. That gives me at least some hope that the VIC chip itself is working. I just get no proper video. The screen is either black or constantly trying to sync. I do get a flashing screen when the player dies however - just no actual pixels I can see. I know my video cable is working because I bypassed it by soldering wires directly to the pins of the DIN socket going into the motherboard and I get the same result.
Sadly I have no working CRTs left available to me so I use a SCART to HDMI converter for display - but it has always displayed everything I've thrown at it before - even if it does take a few seconds to sync up sometimes. For example my (modded) PAL Master System, NTSC NES and NTSC Super NES all work perfectly through composite video to the device so I doubt there is something special about the Vic's composite video that is confusing it. In the screenshot it says SECAM, but it skips between PAL and SECAM as it tries to detect the signal.
I have also replaced three of the capacitors (electrolytic ones I had spares of) but that made no difference. I have not yet started replacing all the ceramic ones. Would this be the next logical place to look or would there be some other place to look before I undertake that difficult task (at least for someone with limited soldering skills?)