Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sample.eng.ohio-state.edu!purdue!haven.umd.edu!umbc3.umbc.edu!umbc4.umbc.edu!motteler From: motteler@umbc4.umbc.edu (Howard E. Motteler) Newsgroups: comp.sys.3b1 Subject: Re: keyboard Message-ID: <1991Jun20.035857.25926@umbc3.umbc.edu> Date: 20 Jun 91 03:58:57 GMT References: <1991Jun19.160515@IASTATE.EDU> Sender: newspost@umbc3.umbc.edu (News posting account) Organization: University of Maryland Baltimore County Lines: 18 Michael Begley writes: >well, I seem to have lost the keyboard to my 3b1 during a recent move. Some keyboards are fixable. I've seen 2 older 7300 keyboards that have the pc board totally wrapped in a metallic foil. It's fairly easy for trimmed leads to poke into this and short out. The quick fix is to simply remove the foil. Beware that this may cause your machine to be no longer FCC approved, i.e., it may radiate a bit more r.f. noise. (Nearby shortwave receivers and DAK breadmakers are especially sensitive to this noise.) You can also check the circuit board for cracked solder joints; this can be caused by any excessive force on the keyboard-- pushing, twisting, etc. Simply resolder anything that looks suspicious. -- Howard E. Motteler | Dept. of Computer Science motteler@umbc3.umbc.edu | UMBC, Catonsville, MD 21228