All,
Thank you for the warm welcome! And thank you all for the feedback - the free sharing of knowledge is what it is all about. Oh yes, I have a lot to learn and will help anyone who asks.
I am glad that someone is finding use for this document. "I R an engaeer", and I have the coffee cup to prove it - with the handle on the inside the cup [laugh]. I am a high speed digital/FPGA guy, but now I do a lot of test software for automotive radar.
It took about an evening (while watching TV) to trace out the circuits, then a few hours to clean up the schematic, a couple of hours for the layout and about a day to document it all. Then about an hour to find the problem.
The problem on my E-Unit was there was no current through the Q2 base, so it stayed cut-off - like one pole of a DPDT switch that is stuck open.
Lou N:
Yes, send me the Horn Bell and I will take a look and write up what I find. Write to me via my website to arrange this: http://www.paul.romsky.com/ paul@romsky.com
When you think how long it took me, imagine what document the OEM could have produced, I could have had o-scope shots of all the signals, but I thought that was a bit much, but I can add them if anyone asks.
rail:
Yes, some cut-and-jumper wires can make the unit start in any state you wish. Send me details via paul@romsky.com and I can send you instructions.
WindupGuy: When I was in the US Air Force, we had all sorts of documents like this, when I hit the commercial world I didn't find the level of detail, so I guess I am like you, having a good document on hand makes a great asset.
SWANKO:
You start by assigning each part a reference designator (R1, Q2, etc.), then follow the circuit traces, and draw a rats-nest of what connects to what on pieces of paper. Then you reorganize which components are related to each other, then you try to read part numbers off of the components. Then describe the circuits you see and clean up the schematics. Lionel gets the credit for the design, all I did was fill in the gap on missing detailed documentation.
Paul
Thanks