This is a discussion on Power supply problem on a refurbished Enterprise 450 within the Sun Solaris Hardware forums, part of the Solaris Operating System category; --> Hello, I'm having problems trying to put in service again a refurbished Enterprise 450. The computer has 2 power ...
| |||||||
| FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| ||||
| Hello, I'm having problems trying to put in service again a refurbished Enterprise 450. The computer has 2 power supplies installed and currently no hard disks, keyboard/mouse nor monitor. When I turn it on (with the front key in "stand by" position and both side panels installed) nothing seems to happen: the front leds don't light and fans don't start. On both power supplies, the rear leds "load status" and "AC-present status" turn on, but not the "DC status" led. I found an old post on the Sun website from a guy experimenting the same after installing an UPS, but that is not my situation. Thanks in advance for any help! Marco. |
| |||
| "Muttley" <fake.address@fake.provider.it> wrote in message news:44a7a10f$0$989$5fc30a8@news.tiscali.it... > Hello, > > I'm having problems trying to put in service again a refurbished > Enterprise 450. The computer has 2 power supplies installed and > currently no hard disks, keyboard/mouse nor monitor. > > When I turn it on (with the front key in "stand by" position and both > side panels installed) nothing seems to happen: the front leds don't > light and fans don't start. On both power supplies, the rear leds "load > status" and "AC-present status" turn on, but not the "DC status" led. > > I found an old post on the Sun website from a guy experimenting the same > after installing an UPS, but that is not my situation. > > Thanks in advance for any help! > > Marco. I had a E450 with 3 power supplies that did the same thing. Asked one of the Unix Admins at work about it. He said that the symptom indicated a DC power problem, by which I think he meant the DC-DC converters (aka VRMs) were bad. Luckily mine had 1GB of good memory in it, which I am now using in an Ultra60. Pulled out everything else of value and trashed the case. There was no way I was actually going to crank up those 3 x 700W PSUs at home anyway. Sun makes a very nice T2000 now that uses just 400W or so? |
| |||
| >>I'm having problems trying to put in service again a refurbished >>Enterprise 450 [snip] >>On both power supplies, the rear leds "load >>status" and "AC-present status" turn on, but not the "DC status" led. [snip] > I had a E450 with 3 power supplies that did the same thing. > Asked one of the Unix Admins at work about it. He said that > the symptom indicated a DC power problem, by which I think he meant > the DC-DC converters (aka VRMs) were bad. If it was the VRM (my E450 has one processor+VRM installed) maybe I could find a spare one for testing. Actually, I've read there's a hole circuit board for distributing DC currents inside the computer and I suspect that's the faulty part... which of course would be much harder to replace. By the way, I think the PSUs are ok, since a fault in both of them seems unlikely to me. > Luckily mine had 1GB of > good memory in it, which I am now using in an Ultra60. Pulled out > everything else of value and trashed the case. That, of course, will be my last resort... Thanks! Marco. |
| ||||
| "Muttley" <fake.address@fake.provider.it> wrote in message news:44a98e51$0$993$5fc30a8@news.tiscali.it... > >>I'm having problems trying to put in service again a refurbished > >>Enterprise 450 > [snip] > >>On both power supplies, the rear leds "load > >>status" and "AC-present status" turn on, but not the "DC status" led. > [snip] > > I had a E450 with 3 power supplies that did the same thing. > > Asked one of the Unix Admins at work about it. He said that > > the symptom indicated a DC power problem, by which I think he meant > > the DC-DC converters (aka VRMs) were bad. > > If it was the VRM (my E450 has one processor+VRM installed) maybe I > could find a spare one for testing. Actually, I've read there's a hole > circuit board for distributing DC currents inside the computer and I > suspect that's the faulty part... which of course would be much harder > to replace. By the way, I think the PSUs are ok, since a fault in both > of them seems unlikely to me. > > > Luckily mine had 1GB of > > good memory in it, which I am now using in an Ultra60. Pulled out > > everything else of value and trashed the case. > > That, of course, will be my last resort... > > Thanks! > > Marco. That DC distribution circuit board is certainly possible as a culprit. Good luck. Yes your PSUs are probably ok. I also could not image that all 3 of mine went bad at the same time, very unlikely. |