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Commodore Amiga 1080 monitor resurrection 

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#Commodore #Amiga #CRT #repair
I recently came across this Commodore Amiga 1080 monitor that was dropped or suffered some type of severe impact. It had lose parts inside and was reportedly "totally dead." In this video, I bring it back to life!
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-- Tools
Deoxit D5:
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O-Ring Pick Set: (I use these to lift chips off boards)
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Elenco Electronics LP-560 Logic Probe:
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Hakko FR301 Desoldering Iron:
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Rigol DS1054Z Four Channel Oscilloscope:
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Head Worn Magnifying Goggles / Dual Lens Flip-In Head Magnifier:
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TL866II Plus Chip Tester and EPROM programmer: (The MiniPro)
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EEVBlog 121GW Multimeter:
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DSLogic Basic Logic Analyzer:
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Magnetic Screw Holder:
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Universal ZIP sockets: (clones, used on my ZIF-64 test machine)
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RetroTink 2X Upconverter: (to hook up something like a C64 to HDMI)
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Plato (Clone) Side Cutters: (order five)
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Heat Sinks:
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Little squeezy bottles: (available elsewhere too)
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--- Links
My GitHub repository:
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--- Instructional videos
My video on damage-free chip removal:
• How to remove chips wi...
--- Music
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26 июл 2022

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Комментарии : 273   
@Rorschach1024
@Rorschach1024 2 года назад
I'd reinforce all those cracks, with strong epoxy. I'd also carefully drill a hole at the end of each branch of the crack to terminate the crack to stop it from cracking further.
@drewpartlow9813
@drewpartlow9813 2 года назад
I would like to see this done!
@bennetfox
@bennetfox 2 года назад
If you guys weren't aware, this is how they stop cracks from running in windshields.
@morantaylor
@morantaylor 2 года назад
Definitely dont use hot glue to reinforce as the glue tends to soften when the internal temperatures heat up.
@Walczyk
@Walczyk 2 года назад
@@bennetfox Also in steel! Had to do this on a cracked crankcase lol.
@jimb032
@jimb032 Год назад
That's a great idea with the hole! I just fixed a super valuable Tandy cm-8 that had all these exact problems-even the red I. The top corner. I did epoxy mine, but I'm going to tear him back apart and do this. I think it had 3 cracks and I e found it's way to a hole already. Thanks again for your suggestion
@The8BitGuy
@The8BitGuy 2 года назад
Great work, as always!
@PiotrK2022
@PiotrK2022 Год назад
I don't think so... Soldering a jumper wire point to point is not a great work. To do that properlly, he sould scrape away solder mask and solder it along whole damaged distace
@aaa000777
@aaa000777 2 года назад
I always preferred to remove the solder mask all along the crack. Then using solder wick if possible to bridge over the crack. This provides an electrical connection, some rigidity and some flexibility for the board. If solder braid is too large for the trace, then use the largest gauge of hook up wire that will fit. The reason for doing it this way is to make sure I don't miss a cracked trace along the crack. And finally ohm out all of the connections!
@Mclaneinc
@Mclaneinc 2 года назад
From a novice POV, this sounds like the logical choice just for the rigidity alone..
@timballam3675
@timballam3675 2 года назад
Fill the crack with crazy glue...
@pederb82
@pederb82 2 года назад
I agree. Solder braid is also my preference. Off topic but solder braid has a bad reputation but is my preferred method of de soldering components too. Ppl just don’t know how to use it any more. They try some old crap that’s been laying around and the flux in it is long gone and think it sucks. If anyone is of this opinion i challenge them to apply a drop of fresh flux on the braid before use and it will remove just about any amount of solder on a solder joint like a breeze.
@absalomdraconis
@absalomdraconis 2 года назад
@@pederb82 : I think the bigger problem was that some braid (Radio Shack, as I recall, so pretty common) came with _no_ flux at all.
@RionRedemp83
@RionRedemp83 2 года назад
@@absalomdraconis 🤦
@MariaEngstrom
@MariaEngstrom 2 года назад
Suggest finding the very ends of the cracks and drilling a hole there so that the cracks cannot grow further.
@KennethScharf
@KennethScharf 2 года назад
I would have scrapped the solder mask off on both sides of the major cracks, tried to flatten out the PCB so the cracked ends came back together, and then flowed solder to bridge all the breaks and hold the board back together. Would have then added the heavy bodge wires. If that monitor is NOT a Trinitron or similar one gun inline tube then there should be a set of rings on the yoke or neck of the tube that need to be rotated to set purity. This applies to the triad gun (RCA) type of tube. If the thing was dropped those rings could have shifted.
@tekvax01
@tekvax01 2 года назад
I've spent many hours doing convergence and tube replacement on colour monitors, mostly $15K to $30K broadcast monitors... If you think static convergence is difficult wait until you have to do the dynamic convergence! Fun times :) I'd have to say, for never doing a static convergence and the purity magnets before, you did an excellent job, sir!
@Arcadenut1
@Arcadenut1 2 года назад
Another note for those playing along, you should never push on the neck board from the anything other than the center of it. Pushing from the edges, you risk cracking the neck board and you'll be doing a lot more jumpering. All those who have suggested doing epoxy and just scraping the mask off and soldering right at the crack are correct.
@lloydieization
@lloydieization 2 года назад
Was think the same thing myself as it would help reinforce any gluing afterwards.. I'd also use thicker (solder adhering) and longer metal pieces to bridge the thicker traces as it would help reduce strain and help stop the "bridging" solder from flexing.
@jeromethiel4323
@jeromethiel4323 2 года назад
Those monitors were great value for the money. I remember using one as a TV, as we had a miniature B&W TV (with like a 3.5" tube), but it had composite out. Ran that into by 1084, and we had color TV instead of B&W, and you could actually see what was going on! Fond memories of the 1084 and 1084S.
@MrDuncl
@MrDuncl 2 года назад
Amstrad (one of Commodore's big rivals in the U.K. actually sold a Tuner box to convert their monitor into a TV. I was going to suggest you could also use a VCR, but back then they cost more than a C64 and a TV together.
@SuperVstech
@SuperVstech 2 года назад
As damaged as that was, I’m most impressed the power switch is functional… all of mine have failed.
@AceStrife
@AceStrife 2 года назад
Videos like this really just let me kick back, press play and enjoy a relaxing dinner, which is the exact thing I needed today.
@pheffr
@pheffr 2 года назад
I really enjoyed this video format! I don't mind a long video that shows the real process of troubleshooting. I watch these kinds of videos to unwind, and I don't mind if they aren't polished. I like to think it through with you while you do it! Oh, and great work keeping one more CRT out of the landfill!
@fensoxx
@fensoxx 2 года назад
Don’t apologize at the end! That was my favorite video you’ve ever done. Not sure why, probably because it was all business from beginning to end. Also I spent many teenage years with my A500 in front of one of those so they have a very special place in my heart.
@billfruge25
@billfruge25 2 года назад
Awesome video and what a fantastic job AB!! TBH it's fortunate the damage wasn't a LOT worse if it was dropped. I had an old EGA monitor fall off the back of a table and instantly that acrid smell of magic smoke and the telltale sounds of crispyfry(tm) happening inside. So kudos to you AB for doing such a fantastic job on restoring that monitor back. :D
@elmestguzman3038
@elmestguzman3038 2 года назад
Great repair… took me back to my old days repairing TV, VCRs and Microwaves way back in the day. I had to do a similar repair to a Sony TV I am glad you got it fix.
@krnlg
@krnlg 2 года назад
Wow what a great video. Monitor repair tour de force!
@kuro68000
@kuro68000 2 года назад
I guess the other way to do this would be to epoxy the board back together, then scrape off some solder mask and solder over the broken parts.
@primus711
@primus711 2 года назад
Yes that would have been the correct way What he did wasn't good took longer and looks horrible Either way the pcb should have been glued back
@AugurIliKur
@AugurIliKur 2 года назад
That is how we repaired this extremely common failure in the 90s. Epoxy the board literally made of epoxy back together then fiber brush the traces and bridge them with solder. Replace any missing with copper foil tape. Seal the board. Did this a hundred times at least.
@Stoney3K
@Stoney3K 2 года назад
That would have been my idea as well. Soldering the cracked traces back together would also make the board more solid again.
@andymouse
@andymouse 2 года назад
Adds mechanical strength too.
@primus711
@primus711 2 года назад
@@Stoney3K yeah and the problem is it can crack more as he didn't fix the support piece and have arcing Im very let down on this horrible job i expected better from him I really hope he sees this comment and redo it And fix the support
@rager1969
@rager1969 2 года назад
Once again, Adrian amazes us!
@mowersman
@mowersman 2 года назад
This has been a seriously helpful video, thank you! I've got a nice Tatung multifunction (MDA, CGA, EGA and VGA) monitor that has/had exactly the same issues. It took a nasty drop during shipping and the flyback cracked the PCB. Fixed that and despite my better judgement, did a full recap as a couple were giving issues. But it had colour purity and convergence issues almost identical to whats seen here. I had written the tube off as damaged, and it is in bits half way through a tube swap currently, but having watched this, I'll be reversing that and having a more in depth play with moving the yoke and purity rings. I cannot overstate how much I have learnt from your channel, it is absolutely one of the best out there.
@mal2ksc
@mal2ksc 2 года назад
I had an SVGA monitor take a tumble down some (fortunately carpeted) stairs, and although it didn't quit working, it got _way_ out of adjustment. I was hesitant to work on it, not because I didn't know how, but because I had done so enough times to get thrown across the room once. I remember doing a lot of the job with paper tubes and chopsticks. I never did get the convergence completely corrected in the corners.
@svenjackel2531
@svenjackel2531 2 года назад
Great work, i absolutely liked "metallurgic" aproach on fixing a broken board :) very entertaining video, thumbs up!
@MirceaD28
@MirceaD28 2 года назад
Nice job Adrian. A tip for you. Scrape the coating on the broken traces, and bridge them where the PCB is broken. Use a stiffer wire and it will stiffen the board and stopping it from flexing. You can also put superglue in the crack. These combined it will make a strong area. I have done this with great results despite the fact that some people say it a big NO-NO on using super glue.
@NaoPb
@NaoPb 2 года назад
Nice save of that screen. I think you did just fine with the hot glue. It's not like you can protect it from everything that might happen in it's life. So if it gets dropped again, it's up to the next repair person to then fix it. 43:55: I love this shot with the mirror and how we can see you through the mirror. And neat to see you looking at the camera when you talk to us, even if you're not in the picture.
@solarbirdyz
@solarbirdyz 2 года назад
Some of the early 1080s had longer-duration phosphor which meant that interlace was virtually flicker-free, particularly compared to, say, the 1084. There are obviously plusses and minuses to that but the first A1000 owner I knew got his monitor and system _incredibly_ early and my god, even interlaced mode was beautiful.
@Mclaneinc
@Mclaneinc 2 года назад
Nice video Adrian, I love the troubleshooting part of the videos, watching an experienced electronics guy show in understandable terms for a novice is soo helpful. Obviously as a novice I don't recommend novices to play about with 26KV devices, unless they have triple checked about discharging the item, seeing if it's fitted with a bleeder resistor etc etc...HV can do big damage to a heart etc. Apart from that, have to agree with the general consensus of scraping the mask off and basically welding the PCB on both sides. But hey, what do I know :)
@mal2ksc
@mal2ksc 2 года назад
I agree with patching up the wide traces with some solder braid, but _also_ leave the jumper wires in place and only rely on the solder braid for mechanical reinforcement. Then you only have to patch the wide ones, there's no mechanical point to patching something half a millimeter wide.
@BrokeDad1
@BrokeDad1 2 года назад
For some reason Red Green show came to mind while you did this repair .. hehe. Nice job and thanks for the video.
@maniatore2006
@maniatore2006 2 года назад
That video reminds me on an Television that i have found on the Street, back in 1997 or so, with a broken Neckboard, and yes i fixed it. Thank you for that great Video.
@TonyAtkinspdx
@TonyAtkinspdx 2 года назад
This one was great!! Nicely done
@Waccoon
@Waccoon 2 года назад
The 1080 is a fantastic display and totally worth fixing. I completely lost the red gun on mine a few years ago, and was worried I wouldn't be able to fix it. Turns out, the digital/analog input switch on the rear was all corroded. Taking apart the switch to clean it, polishing the RCA jacks, and lubricating the pot knobs in the front was all it took to get the monitor working almost like new. I have a flicker fixer in my A1200 "just in case", but I still use the 1080 for a display because it looks great.
@lmorchard
@lmorchard 2 года назад
Hey there from another Portlander! Turns out I made almost exactly this repair last weekend to another 1080 monitor that fell and cracked its PCB. Used some epoxy to repair the case and the shattered PCB, scraped solder mask off traces with a fiberglass pen to bridge the cracks with soldered wires.
@tigheklory
@tigheklory 2 года назад
Great video, for best results using a degaussing coil start far away and move in circles toward the screen until you are right up next to it. then back away still moving in circles until the coil doesn't affect the picture. Also GC Tools #9317 coil can run much longer, I recommend it. Looking forward to you getting a Coleco Adam computer. 🙂
@amigacoverdisk
@amigacoverdisk 2 года назад
Woah, I've never seen a circuit board crack like that from a drop before. Must of been a nasty fall. Rest of the monitor took it pretty well! Great repair, well done & nice video. Thank you!
@lmorchard
@lmorchard 2 года назад
I had a 1080 PCB crack just like that after a drop from a desk-height shelf, about 3 feet maybe? It hit a thin carpet over a basement floor. Not the best thing to happen to it.
@travcollier
@travcollier 2 года назад
The flyback is very heavy, and board materials vary. From what I've seen, it seems like even cheap boards these days tend to use a more rugged fiberglass than back when this monitor was made.
@PeteWord
@PeteWord 2 года назад
Great troubleshooting video!
@fredericksmith8151
@fredericksmith8151 Год назад
I,ve a commodre 2000 and a 1081 monitor and want to hopfully get it up and running again, after 30+ years it's been in my loft and have found yours and many more sites very usefull.
@CapnKetchup
@CapnKetchup 2 года назад
Turned out nice!!! Good job!
@JohnDee1527
@JohnDee1527 2 года назад
I love these videos. Thanks for the entertainment!
@PatricKerr
@PatricKerr 2 года назад
Great video as always you entertain 👍
@telemedic5142
@telemedic5142 2 года назад
Great video, good result. Just a point about auto degauss posistors. The idea is it’s low resistance when cold, and applies a voltage to the coil that diminishes as it heats up. You had powered the monitor face down, and although the flyback was not connected, the degauss was. Degauss happens with respect to the earth’s magnetic field. So if it degaussed face first, and the posistor stayed hot, no further degauss would occur. This means as you sit it back upright it’s no longer degaussed with respect to the earth. Leave the set off for 15 mins or so, then try again. I also recommend to use some epoxy resin to fix the the cracked pcb and stop and further spread. But that said, well done. Another one saved :)
@yeoldestuff
@yeoldestuff 2 года назад
That red wire is monstrously thick, but it's probably the right choice in this case. For low voltage low current stuff I typically use wires from a high quality Cat5e Ethernet cable, their insulation is rated for up to 125VDC. For low voltage high current stuff I use automotive wire rated for 48VDC.
@mal2ksc
@mal2ksc 2 года назад
For low voltage low current in an application where I don't have to worry about mechanical stress much, I like using solid-core telephone exchange wire, because there's no fear of a solid wire unraveling and having a whisker cause a short -- they don't have any whiskers. I remember Cat 3 and some really cheap "Cat 5" cables (that never really worked at speed) had the same solid core wires, but more recent cables don't seem so coat-hanger stiff so I suspect they're not solid core anymore.
@yeoldestuff
@yeoldestuff 2 года назад
@@mal2ksc I agree, solid core wire is better sometimes.
@timsmith2525
@timsmith2525 2 года назад
My 1080, which was manufacturer in November of 1985, is still going strong.
@Dreamshadow1977
@Dreamshadow1977 Год назад
Most expressive hands in the business.
@bitdigital8052
@bitdigital8052 2 года назад
I have one similar to this, it’s Commodore Branded in the front and I believe the model # is 2002. It’s one of the best versions of this body styled monitor IIR. I remember buying all the commodore branded cables for it back in 2014 or so.
@yeastboyuk
@yeastboyuk 2 года назад
It's like you are fighting entropy... And winning Adrian!
@ChromiaCat
@ChromiaCat 2 года назад
15:04 A good trick for that is to twist the end of the wire(the metal strands), that makes it harder for the strands to spread, also minimizes the chance of a strand sticking to somewhere it shouldn't.
@tiporari
@tiporari 2 года назад
I have one like this and have had it for 30+ years. It's a versatile and useful display for composite AND 15khz arcade monitors. I recapped mine totally which restored it to 100% like new function. I cleaned and resoldered the flyback while I had it apart, but they can't be beat. Mine has audio also.
@gedgedk4929
@gedgedk4929 2 года назад
Wow just ty for restoring it
@jkeelsnc
@jkeelsnc 2 года назад
I have one of these 1080 monitors at home that I use with a C64. It is pretty good. Convergence needs some minor adjustment but otherwise functional. The versatility is good for different retro systems.
@datamoon
@datamoon 2 года назад
You resurrected that bad Larry! Nice job!
@noblsht
@noblsht 2 года назад
Good job very impressive I'm gonna route around and watch some of your other videos and probably subscribe thanks
@angrydove4067
@angrydove4067 2 года назад
I had a Commodore 1902 back in the day, it was just a crippled 1080 but I soldered in the missing wires to make it Amiga compatible. I have a working 1080 now. Nice fix.
@MasterofNoneTV
@MasterofNoneTV 2 года назад
could you explain what you did to make a 1902 amiga compatible?
@notbugs
@notbugs 2 года назад
I loved my 1084 which i also used as a TV using the tuner in my Hitachi VHS.
@force4200
@force4200 2 года назад
I used superglue on some broken mainboards and they is going strong even today :) Great channel keep up the great work!
@one_b
@one_b 2 года назад
I did the same repair to a badly cracked board under the flyback in an RCA 14in flat TV that was mishandled in shipping. (It was a bummer because it was actually packed pretty well.) I was floored when it actually worked!
@Renville80
@Renville80 2 года назад
Keep in mind once you get above several hundred volts, you want to keep the joints clean and smooth to minimize the possibility of arcing. There is a special paint called “Glyptal” that can be used to coat connections that may need a little extra protection. The other suggestions regarding stop-drilling the cracks and scraping the solder mask before soldering across the cracks are good as well.
@nickwallette6201
@nickwallette6201 2 года назад
There shouldn’t be anything on that board higher than a couple hundred volts. The really HV is all through the anode, and that’s a sealed cable straight from the flyback.
@tjlazer71
@tjlazer71 2 года назад
I've had this monitor since 86 when I got my Amiga 1000 and have picked up many other model monitors from Commodore over the years and the 1080 seems to have a kind of blurry composite video compared to other commodore monitors, even the 2002. RGB is fantastic though. I first discovered this when I connected my Commodore 64 to it.
@JasonTHutchinson
@JasonTHutchinson 2 года назад
That's nice you got it going again. Eventually the board should be glued back together, and the traces fixed permanently. You can use super glue to put the board together, and then bridge the cracks using 0 ohm surface mount resistors.
@TheFurriestOne
@TheFurriestOne 2 года назад
So that black soot is a sign of high hours? Found some in the 1995 Apple color 14" monitor I cleaned up recently. This is the kind of repair I enjoy, bodging busted bits back together! In some ways, the easiest kind of fix. Funny thing, the first time I turned it on I got a power LED and a screen-flash when turning it off, but after plugging it in to my Performa 475 it wouldn't show any activity, not even power-LED, unless the Mac was also on! Weird. This Amiga CRT is still in better shape than my Amstrad-clone monitor/power-supply that was EOL'd/stripped for scrap by the PC shop somebody dropped it off at! Huge holes in the case, heat-sinks ripped out along with their attached components and chunks of the PCB! Still fixable, I think, as I have the schematics, just need to find some rare/obsolete replacement parts.
@8BitNaptime
@8BitNaptime 2 года назад
A classic! That vaguely bulbous shape sitting on a 1000 was part of my childhood.
@jumhig
@jumhig 2 года назад
I've repaired some cracked PCBs , strengthened the PCB by expoxying strips of PCB material over the cracks, before adding jumper wires, for a more "permanent" repair.
@1967CougarXR7
@1967CougarXR7 2 года назад
My friends and I have been using hemostats for years. You always found them for sale at the computer shows/flee markets during the 80s and 90s
@bobrandale4864
@bobrandale4864 2 года назад
Love your videos! I have my original Commodore monitor (no model # on it, so probably the 1080 like this one?) Mine has rainbow coloring in the corners, so probably similar problem, I suppose. I just need to find a degaussing tool, or find out why the internal one doesn't work on power-on? Thanks again for your hard work and sharing with the community!!!
@twocvbloke
@twocvbloke 2 года назад
I had to do pretty much the same work with both my Sony Trinitron TVs, the effects of mis-handling by a courier breaking stuff in transit with the flyback being jostled about and cracking the PCB, took some time to repair the damage, and both TVs worked perfect after repairs (21" needed other work, possibly lightning or power surge damaged), the joys of resin-bonded paper PCBs, they're just not suited for mechanical strength...
@tjlazer71
@tjlazer71 2 года назад
2:16 the metal plate is for the Amiga 1000. Some of these monitors did not have it and caused the machine to have read/write errors! I discovered this because I was having errors on one of my Amiga 1000's with one of my 1080's and when I swapped monitors the errors went away. I then noticed this metal plate under it!
@a4000t
@a4000t 2 года назад
I had a C= 1960 multisync as a kid shipped to me,outside looked perfect,but board inside was cracked in 2 pieces across the middle.. I actually epoxied the board back together and jumpered all the traces back together with wire. It still works today but was a crazy amount of work.. Things u do when you are poor.
@kencreten7308
@kencreten7308 2 года назад
Great video, Adrian. Thanks again. Central safety idea, x-rays are not good. Heh.
@jaycee1980
@jaycee1980 2 года назад
X-ray production is only really a hazard if the tube anode voltage is set far too high
@dogsarebest7107
@dogsarebest7107 2 года назад
Hey Adrian, do you know about "fiberglass scratchbrush"? They're a rod of compacted, parallel lines of fiberglass in like a lipstick container. They work great for removing corrosion in tight areas, but also for removing soldermask without damaging the copper underneath (unless you REALLY work hard). They save a ton of time, just gotta wipe with a napkin every few swipes (or do it under alcohol) so the fibers don't go everywhere as they break off. Super useful stuff for doing rework, and dirt cheap (most pens come with a second/spare fiberglass rod in the handle)
@mal2ksc
@mal2ksc 2 года назад
Yes, he has used them in previous videos. He probably would have used one if he had decided to patch the traces for mechanical reinforcement, but since he didn't, it didn't really come up.
@dogsarebest7107
@dogsarebest7107 2 года назад
@@mal2ksc Yeah it was a hell of a repair too! I do worry about it being so 'floppy' and more damage occurring. But that really was a painful repair to watch, probably because I've had to do similar and hated every second of it! His work has gotten so good recently, one of the few resto/repair channels I can watch. Dude loves his old puters and puts in the blood sweat and tears to really pull amazing repairs out of thin air. Hard not to enjoy watching someone passionate about their work.
@mikewifak
@mikewifak 2 года назад
Adrian’s Bodge Lodge
@adriansdigitalbasement2
@adriansdigitalbasement2 2 года назад
LOL! 😂
@mikeuk666
@mikeuk666 2 года назад
No a real bodge needs a paperclip
@MrTBoneSF
@MrTBoneSF 2 года назад
Adrian's Bodge City? Also, "methological" = methodical + mythological.
@rangercv4263
@rangercv4263 2 года назад
Adrian’s metho-logical dance party?
@williamgraham2468
@williamgraham2468 2 года назад
My A1080 is the same vintage. Something inside used to arc ocassionally, resetting the Amiga unless the video cable shield ground was connected. The horizontal drive eventually failed.
@LegalizeAdulthood
@LegalizeAdulthood 2 года назад
I had one of these with my Commodore Amiga 1000 that I bought right when they came out.
@Somelucky
@Somelucky 2 года назад
I really miss the 13" composite monitor I used on my C64. Or that Dell 21" Trinitron beast where a cap most definitely blew but I didn't have the courage to attempt a fix back then. Sure LCDs are nice because they're thin and light, but most can't compete with the standard refresh rates of low end CRTs.
@amurtigress_mobile365
@amurtigress_mobile365 2 года назад
Don't be too confused about the color impurities. It happens immediately if you are putting a CRT on it's side....just takes an hour or so to disappear, even without a degaussing coil....I've had that myself. On monitors and TV sets. Hope that helps!
@coyote_den
@coyote_den 2 года назад
That ringing on the left side of the sweep could be an issue with the flyback. If the bit that broke off in the brace was part of the core, it could be slightly detuned now.
@Renville80
@Renville80 2 года назад
I had a bunch of TTY terminals that used an off the shelf CRT module produced by Zenith and it was VERY common for the flyback ferrites to be cracked, and there would be ringing fold over in the picture as a result.
@mal2ksc
@mal2ksc 2 года назад
Doesn't that usually make the flyback whine audibly in use though? I think Adrian said he can still hear the 15.5 kHz H-sync, so if the coil was complaining, he probably would have noticed.
@An_Onion
@An_Onion 2 года назад
When I was in grad school I had to repair the PCB of an ancient spectrophotometer that the board had cracked like this. We used some binary epoxy to cover up the crack and add some strength, and then had to bodge dozens of traces. The damn thing worked perfectly when we were done, though!
@donoester6744
@donoester6744 2 года назад
Regarding the ripple: Look for a small value capacitor in series with the horizontal scan coils. It is likely in parallel with a resistor. The purpose of this is to create an LRC circuit to counteract ringing caused by the inductance of the energized coils at scan frequency. The ringing effectively means that the cathode beam(s) are moved at a non-constant pace, causing small ripples in brightness. Since many of the traces around the flyback have been repaired, you're also affecting the "ringing" to a small degree as well.
@eDoc2020
@eDoc2020 2 года назад
I haven't looked at the schematics but I would suspect the S capacitors are film capacitors.
@sonjas.606
@sonjas.606 2 года назад
impressive fixing 👌
@Rangerman9404
@Rangerman9404 2 года назад
As a native of Massachusetts, I say your attempt at an Australian accent was more like a an attempt at a Boston accent, in fact that's what I thought you were going for
@kaitlyn__L
@kaitlyn__L 2 года назад
Indeed, it was more fronted (oral posture wise) whereas Dave Jones speaks more at the back of his mouth
@minty_Joe
@minty_Joe 2 года назад
This trick is pretty obvious and well known to experienced bench technicians. You can test a capacitor already soldered in place without completely removing it by either cutting the lead on one side or desoldering one lead out of circuit, then do an ESR check on the cap.
@rodhester2166
@rodhester2166 2 года назад
great video.. it freakin works..
@TortureBot
@TortureBot 2 года назад
My old Commodore 1902 I had for years looked IDENTICAL to this monitor. Never took it apart, but externally, only the badging was different.
@adriansdigitalbasement2
@adriansdigitalbasement2 2 года назад
Yeah a bunch of US Commodore monitors looked just like this, but often the manufacturer was not the same. 1080, 1902, 1084, etc. I think there were at least 3 companies making these that externally looked the same.
@TortureBot
@TortureBot 2 года назад
@@adriansdigitalbasement2 I wish now that I would have kept it. It developed some type of short inside or the flyback was arcing. I tossed it out, but with what skills I have now, I'm sure I could have fixed the thing.
@chuck2501
@chuck2501 2 года назад
That extension lead may only cut the positive, neutral is probably still there. And if wired incorrectly maybe the positive.
@bsvenss2
@bsvenss2 2 года назад
0:47 Looks like an soldering iron mark... I had plenty of these on my monitors during a period.
@andymouse
@andymouse 2 года назад
Me too !
@milk-it
@milk-it 2 года назад
It's a shame we didn't see you move the wedges and yoke around. That was - in my opinion - the hardest part of this repair to tweak that picture. I wouldn't know how to perform that part of the operation. I did find the interpretation of the schematics in conjunction with the oscilloscope educational, though, because CRTs aren't trivial for a novice retro repair enthusiast.
@stever285
@stever285 2 года назад
I got rid of my Amiga in the mid 90's like almost everyone else but I kept the monitor, I had that thing hooked up to a DVD player, good picture, stereo speakers and I thought it was unkillable. It finally went toes up about 6 years ago...it was like losing a family member.
@JamesPotts
@JamesPotts 2 года назад
I really need to get my 1080 working. It's got lots of screen burn, and a "control panel" sticker across the top, but it would be nice to see it fire up.
@bluehatguy4279
@bluehatguy4279 2 года назад
In some materials, such as metal or glass, you can arrest a crack by drilling a circular hole just in front of its path. It eliminates the tear in progress by spreading forces evenly. I would think it would work well on a PCB, if there is room for a hole.
@robwebnoid5763
@robwebnoid5763 2 года назад
I still have my 1080, that I got for free exactly 15 years ago (2007). It was given to me by another user at Lemon64. Actually he had several monitors he wanted to give away, but I didn't have space so I wanted the best one. So through correspondence, he sent me photos of the same C64 screen on each monitor & I found the 1080 had the sharpest. We worked out a way to get that monitor to me so we met up at a parking lot as he said he was going through different cities anyway. Iirc, one of the other monitors was a 1084s & yet the photo I saw of it was a little poorer than the 1080, so whatever the case if the 1084 & 1080 are closely related, even if possibly different tube manufacturers, I went by what my eyes saw. It makes sense that the 1080 is sharp, given that it was designed for Amigas. To this day I've mainly used it for vcr's & c64's. The other reason I got the 1080 was to replace a Magnavox cm8702 that I had been using for my c64 since the early 1990's which then died by around 2010 or so, iirc, so this was a nice overlap. I still have that Magnavox so I will be troubleshooting that eventually. So far I've seen like a blown cap, but I'm not sure, I don't have a scope nor an esr meter, but I did acquire the 8702 service manual via eBay.
@Soulox
@Soulox Год назад
Damn ima need someone like you to fix my 1080 bruh just watching why you do it it looks high key scary
@lexluthermiester
@lexluthermiester 2 года назад
@Adrian's Digital Basement ][ SuperGlue! Fill those cracks with SuperGlue and once cured go over it all a second time. SuperGlue's natural wicking action will work it's way into all the cracks and fibers of the PCB and create a very strong bond. Been using SuperGlue for these kinds of repairs for years and it works wonders!
@paulmathison2906
@paulmathison2906 2 года назад
The ringing could be caused by pick up from the white wires as the pass close to the LOPT( line output transformer).I use to be a TV engineer and a common issue with ringing was due to a damping resistor across the line linearity coil. They would go high in value causing the lin coil to ring which would show visibly on the screen.
@rtechlab6254
@rtechlab6254 2 года назад
Nice repair, but you made your life harder than needed. Use a small drill bit to stop the cracks at the end. Stabilise the pcb temporarily with hot glue. Then use those fibre glass pencils to remove the solder mask, flux the copper and use solder to jump the cracks. Wire wrap wire to jump thin traces. Test, fix anything you missed then Epoxy the crack with non metallised epoxy. As mentioned below the flyback core may be damaged. Shango66 covers this with the self destructing Sonys.
@standardnerd9840
@standardnerd9840 2 года назад
I learned to have a complete set of clamps and hemostats in my toolkit by a mentor of mine who was an amazing copier tech AND paramedic 😁
@Electronics-Rocks
@Electronics-Rocks 2 года назад
In UK we never had that shielding also these monitors I have seen several with PCB damage as LOPT is heavy and not supported. Glue (epoxy) the PCB back together first as flexing will cause new problems.
@metatronyt
@metatronyt 10 месяцев назад
Can this be used with an Amiga 500? And if so, what cable would need to be used to connect it? Thanks
@adriansdigitalbasement2
@adriansdigitalbasement2 10 месяцев назад
All Commodore RGB monitors work with all Amigas. The 1080 has the normal 9 pin connection on back for RGB.
@danielflakelar8193
@danielflakelar8193 2 года назад
the way i have done Cracks in tv in the past was to remove the parts from the area and Epoxy the PCB. then fix the tracks and add the components back. it is then unlikely to Re-Crack again.
@kittyztigerz
@kittyztigerz 2 года назад
if you cant get it to work good there IS a way to swap crt to lcd (seen people do that before they want keep they own dream pc case and monitor case like matching set) i do believe in you adrian because i do see it in you and you almost have it i adjusted you go back replace capacitor on video board (where it was disconnected that show no output video n u have plug it back in n there short in there causing ripping video screen)
@db_37205
@db_37205 2 года назад
The 1080 up until the 1084S was Mono. The 1084S was the first to connect stereo speakers to the Amiga stereo output.
@donkeymedic
@donkeymedic 2 года назад
There is no perfect convergence on a CRT however there is a grid that is overlaid on screen that you measure the convergence grid to. Just eye balling it won't work. Not that you can't get close to specs with the eye but you need the grid overlay to get it perfect. But definitely good enough. I once did a convergence on a old rear projection TV and that was a nightmare. 3 CRTs for each color. I hand ruled the grid with dry erase marker and after a few hours it became a "good enough job"
@adriansdigitalbasement2
@adriansdigitalbasement2 2 года назад
Ah that makes sense -- would allow them to make quick work of it all. I'm sure they got really good at on the assembly line, even though it was mostly just "good enough" :-)
@donkeymedic
@donkeymedic 2 года назад
@@adriansdigitalbasement2 Apparently I wasn't completely correct. I was going off a old rear projector that mentioned a grid assembly. for the tub it self you could get this tool. I will see what I can dig up. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-DGzS3IhifRE.html
@chrhall90
@chrhall90 2 года назад
Try shining a bright LED (like the flashlight on your phone) behind the PCB, makes all the cracks really pop out (even small hairline ones, that are easy to miss).
@RylandBingham
@RylandBingham 2 года назад
Adrian Black: Saving our digital heritage one bodge wire at a time.
@bennetfox
@bennetfox 2 года назад
Aaww c'mon man, you're taking the fun out of things! I love opening up monitors that are plugged in and licking things on the inside! 🤣🤣
@Professorke
@Professorke 2 года назад
I've been following you for a long time, but recovering from monitors, you have a lot to learn from that. I do repair of televisions from 1974 and monitors from around 1980. I sometimes get the creeps from how you do this, but well, it's your way of working and I shut up and look further to real repairers, you can only satisfy your own followers who don't know much about it. I do admire you for your troubleshooting of retro computers, you are better at that, not monitors. Not everyone can do everything, right? 😉
@nickwallette6201
@nickwallette6201 2 года назад
The heck? If you’re going to criticize, at least leave something useful to learn from. What exactly was the problem here? “Rea repairers.” Whatever man. He takes in broken stuff and usually ends up with less-broken stuff. That’s still a win. We’re not all born with 40 years of service tech experience. And that’s getting pretty thin on the ground in general, so you gotta do what you gotta do.
@8bitbubsy
@8bitbubsy 2 года назад
What a demotivating speech! Let the man experiment and have fun with it his way. He got it working in the end, didn't he? Older people in the CRT/TV/radio repair community tend to not be humble, in my opinion.
@briangoldberg4439
@briangoldberg4439 2 года назад
Ripple I would check the vertical on the main board. I often find caps on the vert output IC that are close to very hot components and they tend to bake
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