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More Video Card probems-Micron Xceed 306

JT737

Well-known member
Hello everyone,

    As I sit here in my electronics room/Zoom office, I figured I'd ask a question.  I have a Micron Xceed 306 video card that I bought off of eBay about a month ago.  The good news is that it somewhat works; but that's the bad news as well! 
     Half of the displayed video (The lower half displayed on the screen) is (somewhat) alright, but the upper-half of the video has vertical lines going through it, giving the displayed image a jagged appearance.  So I took an educated guess at what the problem might be, and replaced the two Sigmatel 74F82n chips, which from what I can tell are 10 bit buffer chips.  Unfortunately, no luck. 
     Has anyone else here had a Micron 306 card with this problem?  Any ideas at what other chips I should be looking at?

Thanks!

DSC02146.JPG

MVC-003F.JPG

 

techknight

Well-known member
it could literally be any one of those logic ICs. could be the 574s, could be alot of things. could even be the RAM. Unfortunately I dont think the crystal ball approach would work here. 

Might need to use a oscilloscope, or at the minimum, a logic probe and look for stuck lines. 

 

Bolle

Well-known member
That’s screaming for bad VRAM or a stuck line on one (or more) of the 574s that mux the video data output.

I posted the schematics for that card somewhere in the hacks section, that might help you understand the data flow on the card.

 

JT737

Well-known member
Thanks @Bolle.   I'll take a look for the schematic that you posted.  A bad Mux.....that makes sense.  Hopefully that's it, and not one of the VRAM chips.

 

Franklinstein

Well-known member
I imagine it would be something in the VRAM section. See if and how much the problem changes at different resolutions or bit depths.

Also, it appears that the window is exposed on your EPROM. You could potentially have corrupted data in there.

 

Bolle

Well-known member
Bildschirmfoto 2020-05-07 um 09.20.14.png

This might help. I'd actually poke at the 574s first.

The EPROM probably is fine, otherwise the card won't show up or even produce an image.

 
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JT737

Well-known member
Thanks @Bolle!  Also, I have a dumb question:  what is the easiest way to test them (I'm assuming while it's running in the computer)?  I currently don't have an oscilloscope (But I'm planning on buying one) but i do have a very nice fluke multi-tester.

 

JT737

Well-known member
@Franklinstein-The problem seems to be consistent at any color setting or bit depth.  As for resolution, the card only has one output- good old 640 x 480 VGA.

 

Bolle

Well-known member
You can check resistance of each output pin of the muxes (or the inputs on U22 for that matter) to ground or VCC.

Same with the inputs on all 4 muxes.

This might give you a hint if one of them is shorted if you’re getting low resistance somewhere or a value that vastly differs from the others.

 

JT737

Well-known member
I tested out the 574 chips and found one that had some odd resistance readings on one of the inputs.  So i bought some new old stock SN74ALS574BN chips, and when I finally got them in on Saturday, I soldered one in place of the one I thought was bad.  Unfortunately, it didn't work :(
The other problem that I had was with where the chip was; because of it's location I had a hard time getting my hot tweezers around the chip, so I butchered things a little bit when I extracted it-ugh. I did try to remove as much of the solder first using solder wick and a solder sucker, but it still wasn't very smooth.  A decent de-soldering gun is also on the list of things to buy in the next month.....I wish I  had the money for a Hakko one.

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techknight

Well-known member
Might also mean that one of the VRAMs connected to that input is bad.

Did you check the resistance again after replacing the chip?


Its possible, one of the VRAMs has a stuck address or data line dragging that bit down on the bus. 

 

JT737

Well-known member
@Bolle - I did.  And it appears that it's giving me the same wonky readings.  Only question is where would I get new memory chips for this.  Their are 16 of them on the board for what I would assume is a total of 1024k, so each chip must be 64k?   There are these on eBay, but while they are in the right package, they're not the same:
184096113352


@techknight- It's definitely looking like that!

 

JT737

Well-known member
Also @techknight-After the difficulty that I had replacing the one chip, I've decided to wait on replacing the others until I get a de-soldering gun.  Just can't get my hot tweezers in there, and for some reason I wasn't having much luck this time using solder wick and my one-shot solder sucker.

 

techknight

Well-known member
you wont have any luck, its a multi-layer PCB and the only shot you would ever have is if the PCB was preheated, and fresh solder flown into the joints before using desoldering wick. 

aka, a PITA. 

 

macsonny

Active member
I managed to pick up one of these cards but I don’t have the adapter cable to go from card to video connector. Does anyone have the pin out from the card connector to the video connector so I can make my own cable?

 

Bolle

Well-known member
I managed to pick up one of these cards but I don’t have the adapter cable to go from card to video connector. Does anyone have the pin out from the card connector to the video connector so I can make my own cable?
This should be it:

DSC02146.JPG.76b6669cf83e64759d9a540af9fe594a.JPG

/CableOK should be grounded for the card to activate the signal outputs. Freq_Sel selects either of the two oscillators for the pixel clock when pulled to GND or VCC.

The other signals can be wired up straight to a VGA connector.

 
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macsonny

Active member
This should be it:

View attachment 36797

/CableOK should be grounded for the card to activate the signal outputs. Freq_Sel selects either of the two oscillators for the pixel clock when pulled to GND or VCC.

The other signals can be wired up straight to a VGA connector.
Thanks for this guidance. I also found the attached pin out info.

Based on this pin out and what you provided I think this is the connector cable:

XCEED CARD -> DP-15

PIN 1 -> PIN ?

PIN 2 -> PIN ?

PIN 3 -> GND (PIN 1)

PIN 4 -> PIN 3

PIN 5 -> GND (PIN 1)

PIN 6 -> PIN 2

PIN 7 -> GND (PIN 1)

PIN 8 -> PIN 5

PIN 9 -> GND (PIN 1)

PIN 10 -> PIN 9

PIN 11 -> GND or VCC

PIN 12 -> GND (PIN 1)

Does this look right?

Also, what does PIN 1 (VGASYNC) and PIN 2 (VGAVSYNC) on the XCEED card connector connect to on the DB-15?

9C58D385-B5EB-4D4C-BDB8-FC4C5B0FCB24.png

9C58D385-B5EB-4D4C-BDB8-FC4C5B0FCB24.png

 
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