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Lots of issues in the (1970s) digital displays. Some parts are bad, some capacitors are dry, but I followed the problem back to it's source.

A single cracked solder joint on the isolated driver supply. The old heavy transformer, mounted vertically, on a PCB trick.

It pays to look at everything in the trouble area when you have a problem. It may not be exactly what you think it is.

Lots of issues in the (1970s) digital displays. Some parts are bad, some capacitors are dry, but I followed the problem back to it's source. A single cracked solder joint on the isolated driver supply. The old heavy transformer, mounted vertically, on a PCB trick. It pays to look at everything in the trouble area when you have a problem. It may not be exactly what you think it is.
[–] 2 pts

Tisk, tisk.

I expected better soldering skills. That much flux residue and the capacitor is still craptastically flowed. Sure there's no solder mask on that PCB, but really? Is that lead-free RoHS solder melted with a chinkanese Hakko clone?

[–] 3 pts

Your criticisms are duly noted and summarily discarded.

Often, we get messes left behind from the former owner's attempt at repairs. This one has quite a few in it. I've already cleaned up a lot of crap on the mainboard that looked like this...I assume the person I bought it from was easteregging things.

Lead-free solder does not enter this house.

[–] 2 pts (edited )

Needs moar cracked joints! Spied at least two more, unless you just haven't reflowed them yet.

[–] 2 pts

I reflowed every joint on that board.

[–] 1 pt

Seeing these dried/cracked solder joints brings back memories. CRT sockets and switching or flyback transformers were the first things to check.

That’s why people used to slap their TVs back then, to fix issues.

[–] 1 pt

Remember the sets that had those terminal strips with the solder pots that would crack from heat stress? I do not miss that at all.

[–] 1 pt

"Easy pizza" fix, like likes to say.