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[email protected] stans4@prolynx.com is offline
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Default Hunter Alignment Machine

On Aug 31, 11:24*pm, oldjag wrote:
I just picked up a 1990 vintage Hunter F111 4 wheel computerized
alignment machine....price was right it was free. *Cost 30K new, and
has EPROM upgrade from '06 when it was last used. It's a fairly
compact and portable system so I'd like to fix it, but it's no longer
supported by Hunter. *Supposed to beep on power up and show a curser
on the CRT screen. *If I could find schematics for it would probably
be a simple fix. *Possibly just a DC power supply issue. Nice card
rack inside with everything easy to get at. *Display section seems
okay, but no beep from the CPU board on power up, and no response to
front panel push buttons. *Wheel sensors and remote console power up
okay. *Tried cold start button on CPU board, with no luck. Pulled
boards and cleaned card edges. *Was working before being stored
according to former owner. *Anyone ever have or use one of these? *If
nothing else I got some nice sliding wheel turntables to use with my
hand held camber gauge.


Well, there's some general hints for troubleshooting such that I can
give. Locate where the power supply feeds the card rack and start
measuring voltages. If no voltage, remove cards one by one, power
down before removing, of course. If you get voltage back, you've
found a short. Then you get the fun of trying to repair an item with
no info other than what's on the card. '90s vintage should have some
identifiable chips that you can backtrack and find pinouts on, then
it's logic probe and/or O-scope time. If you pull ALL the cards and
don't get juice, you've got a bum PS. That vintage could be linear,
could be switching. You could probably adapt an AT computer supply if
it's a switching unit, a linear supply is fairly easy to repair.
Probably filter caps gone bad sitting there.


Stan