Sinclair ZX80 General Maintenance
Appearance
The Sinclair ZX80 is a classic home computer, and with careful maintenance, it can remain reliable for decades. This guide covers essential care, preventive steps, and troubleshooting for all ZX80 board revisions. Always observe ESD (Electrostatic Discharge) precautions when handling the PCB or components—use a grounded wrist strap and work on an antistatic mat. Regular maintenance intervals:
- Visual inspection: Every 12 months
- Capacitor check: Every 2–3 years
- Full electrical test: Every 5 years or after storage

Board Revisions
[edit | edit source]| Revision | PCB Markings | Notable Differences | Common Issues |
|---|---|---|---|
| Issue 1 | "ZX80 ISSUE ONE" silk | Early production, hand-wired mods | Poor video sync, regulator overheating |
| Issue 2 | "ZX80 ISSUE TWO" silk | Improved video, revised regulator layout | Keyboard connector wear, RAM instability |
Power Supply & Regulator Care
[edit | edit source]The ZX80 uses a simple linear power supply:
- PSU Part: Sinclair 9V DC Adapter (center negative)
- Specs: 9V DC, 700–1000mA, 2.1mm barrel
- On-board Regulator: 7805 (IC3) 5V linear
- Common Failure Modes:
- PSU cable splits or shorts
- 7805 overheating or output drift
- Capacitor (C4, C5) leakage or bulging
On-board Capacitor Designators:
- C4, C5: Smoothing and decoupling for 7805
- C1, C2, C3: Logic supply filtering
Capacitor Replacement Table
[edit | edit source]| Position | Value | Voltage | Notes | Series/Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C1 | 22μF | 16V | Logic rail smoothing | Axial, low ESR |
| C2 | 1μF | 16V | Video circuit | Tantalum or electrolytic |
| C3 | 0.1μF | 50V | Noise bypass | Ceramic disc |
| C4 | 100μF | 16V | 7805 input | Axial, low ESR |
| C5 | 100μF | 16V | 7805 output | Axial, low ESR |
Voltage & Clock Test Points
[edit | edit source]| Test Point | IC/Pin | Expected Value (±Tolerance) |
|---|---|---|
| 5V Rail | IC3 (7805) Output | 5.00V ±0.15V |
| 9V Input | C4 (+) | 9.0V ±0.5V |
| CPU Clock | IC1 (Z80) Pin 6 | 3.25MHz ±0.05MHz |
| Video Sync | IC5 Pin 3 | 5Vpp square wave |
Essential Tools
[edit | edit source]- Antistatic wrist strap & mat
- Multimeter (with continuity and voltage)
- Oscilloscope (≥10MHz, for clock/video)
- Soldering iron (fine tip, ESD safe)
- Solder sucker or wick
- Small flat and Phillips screwdrivers
- IC extractor
- Fine tweezers
- Isopropyl alcohol & brush (for cleaning)
Preventive Maintenance Checklist
[edit | edit source]- Power off and unplug the unit.
- Discharge static and open the case.
- Inspect PCB for corrosion, broken traces, or burnt components.
- Check all capacitors for bulging or leakage.
- Verify keyboard membrane and connector for cracks.
- Clean dust and debris with a soft brush.
- Test PSU output voltage before connecting.
- Reseat all socketed ICs gently.
- Inspect solder joints for cracks ("dry joints").
- Reassemble and test operation.
Common Faults & Quick Checks
[edit | edit source]| Symptom | Likely Cause | Quick Check |
|---|---|---|
| No power | PSU or 7805 failure | Measure 9V in, 5V out at IC3 |
| No video | C2, IC5, or ULA fault | Scope video out, check C2 |
| Keyboard dead | Membrane or connector | Inspect for cracks, reseat |
| Random resets | C1, C4, or RAM | Replace caps, test RAM |
| Overheating | 7805 or shorted cap | Check C4/C5, IC3 temp |
Troubleshooting Flowcharts
[edit | edit source]- No Power
- → Check PSU output (9V)
- → Check 7805 output (5V)
- → If 5V missing, replace 7805 and C4/C5
- → If still dead, inspect PCB for shorts
- No Video Output
- → Confirm 5V present
- → Test C2 and IC5 (video circuit)
- → Swap ULA if available
- → Inspect video connector and cable
- Keyboard Not Responding
- → Inspect membrane for cracks
- → Clean and reseat connector
- → Test continuity across matrix
- Random Freezing/Resets
- → Replace C1, C4, C5
- → Test RAM ICs
- → Check for dry joints on IC sockets