Patrick.B (TTR)
Veteran Member
after I spoke a few days ago with Johanes having being blessed with his visit at my place in Houston, and him repeating 3-4 times "why do you hate restoring Model 1, they are so easy!"
I decided to open the box of Model 1 parts I was given by various sources and see if I could attempt to repair, I always have considered the model 1 not just ingenious feat of commercial decision, but a poorly design and weak hardware construction, but of course it was "inexpensive" so this could go for other such era systems trying to get purchased at the time.
I apologize in advance, I am sorry for the purist this offends, it is only my perception of the model 1 and why until today I always stacked and sold them for parts.
I always saw the model 1 being the step child of so many blogs, web sites and long discussion on how to troubleshoot and repair them, how to constantly having to "tweak them like an old Harley" to get them down the road.
I hope my inexperience and jaded perception of the model 1 not deter you to read more of my trials and tribulations to attempt my very first TRS-80 model 1 Keyboard repair.
I open the "junk box of Model 1's, yes I have a number of them, cases, keyboards, expansion units, monitors etc... and the incredible number of cables required to run them.
I pulled three parts from it to test my hand.. a keyboard and main board and a small device someone explained was a level II upgrade board.
As many parts given to me, all 3 are apart from each other, the flat cable holding the keyboard and main board together was cut a long time ago in two as was the upgrade board had its four leads cut from the main board.. sighs...
So the basic repairs begin.
so the first part was easy enough, the soft pads holding the Rom kit board where split so a quick clean and double sided tape between the pads and boards and voila... back to where it belong, followed with a r4emovale of end of wires on main board and resolder the 4 wires to the main board back in their place.. so far simple soldering techni8cs used. so far so good.
next I attacked the flat cable , not having a spare and particularly hating the finality of a soldered wire in place with no means to part both boards apart from each other to repair or change something on it, was always a quirk of lazy and inexpensive hardware I was talking about easier. so I unsoldered both end of the cut flay cable, and replaced both board ends with pin thru soldered mount headers pins. the one on the main board pointing downwards into the case and the ones on the keyboard pcb pointing upwards https://i.imgur.com/XM6VQJx.png https://i.imgur.com/RWbM13r.jpeg
I decided to open the box of Model 1 parts I was given by various sources and see if I could attempt to repair, I always have considered the model 1 not just ingenious feat of commercial decision, but a poorly design and weak hardware construction, but of course it was "inexpensive" so this could go for other such era systems trying to get purchased at the time.
I apologize in advance, I am sorry for the purist this offends, it is only my perception of the model 1 and why until today I always stacked and sold them for parts.
I always saw the model 1 being the step child of so many blogs, web sites and long discussion on how to troubleshoot and repair them, how to constantly having to "tweak them like an old Harley" to get them down the road.
I hope my inexperience and jaded perception of the model 1 not deter you to read more of my trials and tribulations to attempt my very first TRS-80 model 1 Keyboard repair.
I open the "junk box of Model 1's, yes I have a number of them, cases, keyboards, expansion units, monitors etc... and the incredible number of cables required to run them.
I pulled three parts from it to test my hand.. a keyboard and main board and a small device someone explained was a level II upgrade board.
As many parts given to me, all 3 are apart from each other, the flat cable holding the keyboard and main board together was cut a long time ago in two as was the upgrade board had its four leads cut from the main board.. sighs...
So the basic repairs begin.
so the first part was easy enough, the soft pads holding the Rom kit board where split so a quick clean and double sided tape between the pads and boards and voila... back to where it belong, followed with a r4emovale of end of wires on main board and resolder the 4 wires to the main board back in their place.. so far simple soldering techni8cs used. so far so good.
next I attacked the flat cable , not having a spare and particularly hating the finality of a soldered wire in place with no means to part both boards apart from each other to repair or change something on it, was always a quirk of lazy and inexpensive hardware I was talking about easier. so I unsoldered both end of the cut flay cable, and replaced both board ends with pin thru soldered mount headers pins. the one on the main board pointing downwards into the case and the ones on the keyboard pcb pointing upwards https://i.imgur.com/XM6VQJx.png https://i.imgur.com/RWbM13r.jpeg
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