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Black screen and drive problems with NTSC-J Model 2 Saturn |
Eidolon_NG - May 27, 2016 |
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Eidolon_NG | May 31, 2016 | |||
Yes, the laser lights up. It seems to be a little less shiny red than the one in my PAL Model 1 Saturn device, but it's there. The Saturn only produces a black screen though, no startup sound is audible. |
SegaSaturnShrine | May 31, 2016 | |||||
Oh I'm sorry I misread your original post. Didn't realize it was black screening. Have you tried simply just wiggling the av connection around on the console end/unplugging and replugging? Also is there a modchip installed in this console? That could potentially be causing an issue if the chip is bad or a connection isn't right... |
Eidolon_NG | May 31, 2016 | |||
It is an unmodified console. I rule out a RGB Scart cable connection problem; the Saturn seems to be quite new, and the same RGB Scart cable works perfectly with my Model 1 PAL Saturn. Or is an RGB Scart Cable made for PAL Saturns not compatible with NTSC-J Saturns? To my knowledge, this is compatible; only the other way around (use a cable made for NTSC consoles on PAL machines is not allowed) |
SegaSaturnShrine | Jun 1, 2016 | |||
Check the pinout of what's on the av out jack on the suspect saturn vs. your scart cable. If there's a mismatch this could be your issue. If that's the case I suggest going on ebay or amazon to get the correct cable |
Eidolon_NG | Jun 14, 2016 | |||
Further testing... But no solution yet. Tested: The CD motor spindle works fine (verified this with the little 1,5V battery trick found on youtube, attaching the battery directly to the motor. It spins.). Other than that, the device is still dead. I opened it up, and checked the supply voltage for the only IC I could identify - the ROM chip "MPR-...". It's got 5 Volts, as do the controller ports. The only thing I notice is that the SH2 chip (the one combining both SH2 logic in one chip, labeled 315-6018) and the chip labeled Sega 315-5883 become rather hot, while the other ICs stay rather cool. Also, the optical check of the board (both above and below) is fine, I see no traces of any caps leakage or something. I wish we found a Sega Saturn VA15 board service manual... |
SegaSaturnShrine | Jun 15, 2016 | |||
I wonder if those IC's you mention that were getting hot are toast. At data sheet on those IC's would be helpful for figuring that out as you could take a meter to each pin (with the ground against the case) to see if its outputting the right voltages etc.... |
Eidolon_NG | Jun 20, 2016 | |||
I got hold of the Saturn VA13 Board Service Manual now. Luckily, there are some similarities between a VA13 Board and my VA15 Board Saturn. So, I could do some measurements against the specs, without having a clue how to interpret the results now. Looking forward to ideas/tips on how to proceed! Measurement power supply onboard circuitry - CF1 = 5,05V (VCC) - CF2 = 5,03V (VCC2) - L8 = 5,03V (AVCC3) - L9 = 5,03V (AVCC2) - IC42 Pin 3 = 3,33V (LVCC) Measurement CD Unit Power supply - CN7 Pins 1/4 = 5,05V (CD Drive Connector) Measurement A/V Out Circuit ICs IC21 - Pin 12 = 4,92V (VCC1) - Pin 19 = 4,93V (VCC2) IC22 - not possible to measure for me, because difficult to reach below power supply board Measurement IC9 (Sega 315-5744) - Pin 16 = 4,84V (VCC) - Pin 15 = 4,79V (Reset) !!!!! potential problem?! - stays high --> maybe IC35 (S-80723AN-DL) defective? Here Pin1 (CS=Reset) stays high - Pins 13/14 = ~50Hz (X1/X2 32768kHz) --> probably my multimeter can't measure this correctly - Pins 10/11 = ~50Hz (OSC1/OSC2 4MHz) --> " " Measurement IC17 (Sega 315-5965) - Pin 124 = low (Resetn) - Pin 116 = 5,05V (Vcc) Measurement IC14 (Sega 315-5964) - Pin 78 = low (Reset) - Pin 85 = 4,95V (AVCC) - Sample VCC: Pins 10/151 = 5,03V (VCC) Measurement IC5 (Sega 315-5966) - Pin 100 = high 5,05V (Reset=SYSRES) !!!! potential problem?! stays high - what could be the cause of this? - Sample VCC: Pins 208 = 5,03V (VCC) Measurement IC37 (Sega 315-5962) - Pin 115 = low (Reset=CDRES) - Sample VCC: Pin 7 = 5,03V (VCC) |
SegaSaturnShrine | Jun 20, 2016 | |||
If possible could you take a picture of your motherboard? Preferably with a high megapixel camera? That way I can try and help you map out what's what. |
Eidolon_NG | Jun 20, 2016 | |||
High res pictures of both board sides are here: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/o6lp1mo8toni8vk/AAC7a4N... Somehow, the board system mutilates the link, you have to copy/paste into the browser. |
SegaSaturnShrine | Jun 20, 2016 | |||
Okay, I'm gonna have to sit down with this when I get a chance and map out what I can, its going to take some time... |
Eidolon_NG | Jun 21, 2016 | |||
Hi @SegaSaturnShrine... , thanks for the offer, but no need for you to spend time on this. I could identify all but two ICs and measure them. The two ICs have to be integrated versions of VDP1+VPD2 (IC10, 315-5883) and the integrated Dual SH2 (IC1, 315-6018). Even if I do not have the schematics for these, I can conclude with 99% probability that the board is dead, seeing that all measurements are normal, except maybe IC35, which I need to doublecheck). I now need to buy a working Model 2 Saturn (preferrably VA15, but VA13 would be ok too I guess) as a reference device to compare the dead board measurements with the working one measurements. |
SegaSaturnShrine | Jun 21, 2016 | |||
Well I'm glad you figured it out |
antime | Jun 22, 2016 | |||||
As a rule, reset lines are active low, and the SMPC's reset line is supposed to stay high until the reset button is pressed. Measuring the clocks in the system is a good idea, but you need an oscilloscope for that. |
Eidolon_NG | Jun 22, 2016 | |||||
Unfortunately, I only have a multimeter for measuring up to 10MHz pulses and a logic tester to detect pulses in general. With this, I could verify: - X3 has a correct frequency of around 4MHz (I measured 3.991MHz with the multimeter) - X4 has a correct frequency of around 32768 Hz (I measured 32.76 kHz with the multimeter) - X1 shows a pulse with my logic tester - it is supposed to have 14.3MHz, but I can't measure this with my equipment - X5 shows a pulse with my logic tester - it is supposed to have 19.978MHz, but I can't measure this with my equipment ---> how likely is it that X1 or X5 have failed and produce a different frequency than specified? |
SegaSaturnShrine | Jun 22, 2016 | |||
@antime... is right. I mean for troubleshooting most circuits a multimeter is sufficient but at a high frequency of 10mhz its going to be very difficult to tell what's going on. An oscilloscope would be ideal, but yeah if you don't have one, there's not much else you can do. |
antime | Jun 22, 2016 | |||||
Not that likely. Crystals can suffer from mechanical damage, but a missing or malformed signal can help zero in on the actual problem. |
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