This one is much better. No Swedish characters or keyboard, though.
Now, where did I put that EGA cable?
Still the most beautiful home computer ever made, IMHO.
This one, not so much.
This one doesn't give any signs of life. No power LED, no serial bus reset, nothing.
I'm not sure I tested it when I got it, or if I only tested the other unit.
Oh, this is nasty! Look at that thing where the fuse is supposed to be...
Apparently it's just the power switch that's bad. (And the fuse needs to be replaced of course).
It's nice to have colleagues who know their way around hardware.
@nafmo polyplay sells them:
https://www.polyplay.xyz/Netzschalter-fuer-C64-C128D-DCR-VC20-1541-II-1581
#PCBWay delivers.
But I need something to pull the TED out without destroying it. It's not as simple as it looks in all those videos the repair guys keep publishing :-) So far all I've manged to do is to make scratch marks...
So, does this make it a Commodore 64? Or maybe a Commodore Minus 4?
Uh oh, that is not good. The second unit gives me a black screen with the expansion installed. I pushed in the RAM chips and got some junk on the screen instead.
Moving the jumper to 16K makes it boot up again, so at least I didn't kill the TED chip (I *did* bend its legs slightly on extraction, so I was worried).
So, are the RAM chips on the Fixteen bad, or the assembly? I have no clue. I'll lend it in, but turned off. At least the other one works fine.
@root42 No to both questions. Since I have one working, I didn't want to risk breaking that. PCBWay did mention something about assembly issues with one of the devices, so that might be it. I also do not have any chips of this type.
But I'm happy with one working. I did order two to be assembled in the hope of getting one working unit.
Now what to do with the three remaining naked PCBs I got (minimum print order was five).