So, adding to the long saga of keeping a Quad QSA30A P&P running for light duty, I ran some boards last month and the machine ran fine. I fired it up last weekend, and had some PC hard drive boot-up issues, and then both of the XY servo amps failed to come up. They get an error code on the single 7-segment LED of 3 horizontal bars. Each of these amps failed with the same symptom about 5 months apart, about 2 years ago. I got replacement used amps and got the machine running again. I am guessing that the EPROM in the microcontroller has lost its contents, or at least failed the checksum. When this last happened, at first the machine would not home properly, with jerky moves, but then after resetting the fault, it would run fine. Later, it went completely dead with the 3 line symbol on the LED. That does sound like a fading EPROM issue.
So, now the real issue: Is it crazy to try to keep a 20+ year old machine running by replacing parts with 20+ year old used parts?
And, is it possible to replace just the Sanyo Denki servo amps with something newer? I fear that new Sanyo Denki amps are going to cost more than I have invested in the whole machine.
I'm kind of disappointed with this whole mess. This machine has been quite unreliable. I first chalked that up to poor storage conditions after the machine was taken out of service. But, now two more servo amps have died with the same symptom. The outfits that sold me the spare servo amps don't seem to want to help, other than sell me two more at full (used) price. I ran an even older Philips CSM84 (made by Yamaha) and it was insanely reliable (just not so accurate on placement). I had one sensor die and an accumulation of commutator dust in one motor in 13+ years of use. I don't know why this Samsung-built machine is just falling apart.
Suggestions welcome!
Jon