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Date:      Mon, 12 Jun 1995 22:30:53 -0700 (PDT)
From:      "Rodney W. Grimes" <rgrimes@gndrsh.aac.dev.com>
To:        taob@gate.sinica.edu.tw (Brian Tao)
Cc:        evanc@synapse.net, hackers@freefall.cdrom.com
Subject:   Re: Problem with 2940 SOLVED
Message-ID:  <199506130530.WAA05290@gndrsh.aac.dev.com>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSI.3.91.950613123523.776E-100000@aries> from "Brian Tao" at Jun 13, 95 12:39:02 pm

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> 
> On Mon, 12 Jun 1995, Evan Champion wrote:
> > 
> > Guess what the problem was.
> > 
> > Dead SIMM.
> 
>     Sounds like a problem I had with one of my machines when I first
> installed 2.0.5-ALPHA on it.  It was a brand new motherboard, but I
> was getting random crashes and kernel panics while installing.  The
> master partition editor screen had an extra '0' printed in one
> character cell, while the colour dialog screens did not.  I couldn't
> figure out what was causing the problem, because an identical machine
> sitting next to it breezed through the install.
> 
>     After I inspected the motherboard, I noticed the metal clips that
> hold a SIMM in place were broken, and the SIMM (although held in
> place) was wobbly.  Exchanged the motherboard the next day and all the
> problems disappeared.  Bad contacts can cause weird stuff.  Reminds me
> of Apple's field maintenance suggestion for their Apple III's:  life
> the computer about a foot above a hard, flat surface, then drop.
> Reseat chips as necessary.  ;-)

As a person who has been around the computer manufacturing business
for most of my life working with every thing from silicon processes
to final system testing I have found that over 80% of all computer
eletronic failures can be traced to ``conection failure'' weither
it be at the micron level inside a chip, or macro level from a
cable left unplugged :-) :-)


-- 
Rod Grimes                                      rgrimes@gndrsh.aac.dev.com
Accurate Automation Company                   Custom computers for FreeBSD



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