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Old 02-15-2007, 12:17 PM
kony
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Default Re: Colours of wires from old Mitsubishi power supply

On 15 Feb 2007 02:23:00 -0800, "James Midolo"
<james_354@hotmail.com> wrote:

>Hi Newsgroup,
>
>I have recently tried to get my very old Unisys 286 computer with a
>Mitsubishi-made motherboard working. I switched on the power supply
>and nothing happened, except for a squealing noise from the power
>supply. The fan would normally switch on when the power supply was
>turned on, so this indicated a possible problem with the power supply.
>I pulled the power supply plugs out of the motherboard and tested them
>with a multimeter and barely any voltage (less than a volt) was
>registered between any of the wires and ground. I then opened up the
>power supply and applied a voltage across the fan and it worked. I
>have decided to replace the faulty power supply, but I'm having
>trouble with the colours of the wires and what voltages they are meant
>to be at.
>
>The power supply is a Mitsubishi Electric PC15WB (REV. D). There are
>two plugs going to the motherboard. One plug is a 3x2 with three reds
>going down one "column" and three blacks going down the other. The
>other plug has four wires: brown, blue, yellow and white. You can see
>this plug at http://www26.brinkster.com/darthvader920/jamesmidolo/
>plug.jpg.
>
>The output voltages according to the power supply label are +12V, +5V,
>-5V and -12V. I am wondering if anyone knows or can guess which
>voltages are related to which wire, especially for the brown, blue and
>white wires. I am not worried if I do apply the wrong voltage to the
>wrong wire, because it is an old and useless computer, but it would be
>nice to see it work again.
>
>If anyone wishes to know anything further or for me to take more
>pictures, please let me know. Thanks.
>
>Regards,
>James Midolo


The red is almost certain to be 5V, the most loaded rail on
the system and thus, 3 wires (not to mention, red is usually
5V anyway). Black, ground.

As for the rest, I cannot guarantee the following, a
proprietary supply could be wired any way they wanted to do
it, but this what the standard AT supplies used and what I'd
expect:


Blue : -12V
White : -5V

Brown is the puzzling one. The natural choice seems to be
Power Good, but it was usually an orange wire. Brown on AT
was most commonly the high voltage AC input. I'm not
thinking they took a high voltage AC to the motherboard in
any situation, so Power Good seems to be what's left.

You might see some silkscreening on the PCB inside the PSU
that indicates for certain what these colors correspond to,
or you might be able to trace back the circuit and surmise
it, or if you took very good pictures and posted a link to
them here, someone else might be able to trace the circuit,
though personally I don't recall ever seeing a Mitsubishi
supply like that before, can only imagine it might be fairly
standard inside.


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