Elektronika MK-61 - today I ordered one NIB
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11-03-2021, 04:44 PM
Post: #72
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RE: Elektronika MK-61 - today I ordered one NIB
(09-19-2014 08:29 PM)Francois Lanciault Wrote: I bought a MK-52 a few month ago. It works for about 2 days then died. Hello François. Don't panic!. It is a common problem that these work for a bit, and then refuse to power on or to work properly. In my experience, when I ordered one NIB from e**y, it worked for a month before refusing to turn on; when it did, no matter what key you pressed but it returned to that transe. I started by replacing the only eletrolythic in the machine: a "K50" 20uF 25V capacitor. No change at all unfortunately. Then I took my soldering iron and reflowed all the solder joints in the board: all of them. I spotted some cold soldered points here and there, and corrosion of course (very little). Still no improvement. Lastly I took apart the keyboard assembly, removed all the left sponge debris, brushed the contact points on the motherboard (don't brush the ones on the plastic mat since they are VERY brittle and prone to falling apart) and replaced the keyboard sponge with a 0.5cm thick card size one found at a small portait. Oddly enough, I reassembled the moudule, placed the black protective case of the power supply board, and stored the calculator for 2 weeks (After doing the keyboard replacement, anything worked. I got so frustrated that I decieded to continue later and refresh my thoughts in the mean time). After that it worked perfectly. It has been working since (almost a year now) with the keypress feedback as it would originally have been; no repeated keypresses and no jingling candy inside the case (the keys, since the sponge wasn't printing the right force to keep them from playing in their spot, made a jingle noise when moved slightly because of the clearance. One of my friends made that joke when I presented the calculator to him before doing the repairs.) In conclusion, consider these steps:
In general terms, it is good to take a look at these too:
Finally, remember that this devices are 30y+ (yes, they might be NOS, but they haven't been used for a long time). Components get old, and sometimes need a time to "come back to life"; so give them that time as well. PD: Sorry for replying after this long, but I just found this forum acquaintanced with it. |
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