IBM 3270 PC/GX Troubleshooting Guide: Difference between revisions
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Latest revision as of 13:03, 16 July 2026
This guide documents fault diagnosis for the IBM 3270 PC/GX (machine type 5371). POST is identical to the IBM 3270 PC and IBM 3270 PC/G — standard XT 1xx–19xx codes plus 28xx (3278/79 Emulation Adapter) and 32xx (Display Adapter / APA / PSS). PC/GX-specific failures manifest in the IBM 5378 Display Attachment Unit, the IBM 5379 19" Color Display, or the Graphics Control Program (GCP) layer.
Reference Documents
[edit | edit source]- IBM GA33-3141-0 — Introducing the IBM 3270 Personal Computer/G and /GX Workstations (May 1984).
- IBM SA38-0037-00 — Personal Computer Family Service Information Manual (July 1989), Chapter 10.
- IBM 1502336 — PC 3278/79 Emulation Adapter Technical Reference (October 1983).
Initial Diagnosis Workflow
[edit | edit source]A working PC/GX boots:
- Standard IBM PC XT POST.
- Keyboard Adapter exposes the Display Adapter's video BIOS.
- Standard 3270 PC Display Adapter output is routed through the 5378 to the 5379.
- IBM PC DOS 2.0 / 2.1 boots.
- Graphics Control Program (GCP) loads.
- GCP initialises the 5378.
- Mainframe sessions render on the 5379 at 1024 × 1024 APA resolution.
If any of these does not happen, stop and diagnose at that stage.
POST Codes
[edit | edit source]Identical to the IBM 3270 PC Troubleshooting Guide:
- 1xx–19xx — standard XT chassis.
- 28xx — 3278/79 Emulation Adapter.
- 3201–3250 — Display Adapter.
- 3261–3279 — PSS card.
- 3280–3289 — APA card.
The 5378 is not POST-tested (it operates downstream of the Display Adapter); 5378 faults present as GCP errors or no display on the 5379 rather than POST codes.
5378 Attachment Unit Diagnosis
[edit | edit source]The 5378 is larger and more complex than the /G's 5278, and is the most likely PC/GX-specific failure point:
- No display on 5379 but POST passes — 75-pin cable between 5378 and 5379 disconnected or with pin damage; or 5378 internal PSU dead.
- 5378 PSU dead — 5378 has its own mains lead and internal PSU. Verify the mains lead is connected, the rear-panel power switch is on, and the 5378's status LEDs (if any) are illuminated.
- CGA-compatible mode works but 1024 × 1024 APA does not — the 5378's high-resolution vector graphics processor or extended frame buffer has failed; CGA-compatible mode comes through the Display Adapter directly.
- Mainframe graphics rendered correctly but very slowly — 5378's local processor may be running in fallback mode (e.g. host-side rendering instead of local pan / zoom).
5379 19" Display Diagnosis
[edit | edit source]- No raster on 5379 — flyback failure (high anode voltage means flyback insulation is the most common end-of-life mechanism on 19" 5379s); horizontal output transistor failure; PSU dead.
- Raster but no characters / graphics — video signal from 5378 not arriving; check 75-pin cable.
- Visible phosphor burn-in — display has been used for sustained periods on static graphics. No field repair; replacement requires a 5379 donor.
- Convergence drift (colour misregistration) — adjustment via the 5379 service controls; if unfixable, replacement.
- Geometry distortion (pincushion / barrel) — deflection coil or yoke issue.
Graphics Control Program (GCP) Diagnosis
[edit | edit source]Same as the IBM 3270 PC/G Troubleshooting Guide — GCP runs on PC DOS, loads after standard 3270 PC Control Program init, and manages the 5378's local processor via the system unit's Display Adapter card.
GCP-specific failures on the /GX:
- GCP loads but reports "Display Attachment Unit not found" — 5378 not detected. Verify the cable between the 5371 and 5378 (different connector from the 75-pin cable to the 5379).
- GDDM application crashes when sending high-resolution graphics — 5378 frame buffer issue; reseat the frame buffer RAM modules in the 5378.
- Mouse not tracked correctly — IBM 5277 cable issue or GCP misconfiguration.
Common Field Symptoms
[edit | edit source]- POST passes but no 5379 display — 5378 PSU or 75-pin cable.
- POST passes, DOS boots, GCP fails — version mismatch (GCP for /GX is a different image from GCP for /G).
- Graphics work in DOS but not in mainframe sessions — 5378 vector graphics processor failure.
- Random reboots when warm — PSU caps aged (any of the three PSUs: 5371, 5378, 5379); recap.
- Smell of fish from any unit — RIFA X2 mains-suppression cap venting; power off immediately.
- Severe phosphor burn-in on 5379 — CRT end-of-life.
- Display geometry distortion appears gradually — deflection-board electrolytic ageing; recap the 5379 deflection board.
Diagnostic Workflow Summary
[edit | edit source]- Power on; observe POST.
- If POST fails, treat as standard 3270 PC chassis fault.
- If POST passes but no 5379 display, check 5378 (PSU, cable to 5379, cable from 5371).
- If 5379 shows DOS text but no high-resolution graphics, suspect 5378 vector graphics processor or expanded frame buffer.
- If GCP fails to load, verify version matches /GX configuration.
- If 5379 shows convergence drift or burn-in, suspect CRT end-of-life; donor required.
⚠️ Power-supply RIFA capacitor and tantalum shorts
[edit | edit source]Two age-related failures are near-universal on this era of IBM hardware:
- RIFA mains-filter capacitors in the power supply are metallised-paper parts that crack and fail short with age, producing acrid smoke shortly after power-on. Replace them pre-emptively with modern X2-class parts.[1]
- Tantalum capacitors on the planar (system board) and on ISA cards fail short with age. A shorted tantalum will prevent the power supply from starting (dead machine, PSU protection latched) — look for a cracked or discoloured tantalum and lift suspect ones to find the short.[1]
IBM PC/XT switching supplies also need a minimum load to start, so a bare supply on the bench may not run without a dummy load.[1]
⚠️ CMOS / RTC battery
[edit | edit source]This machine keeps its configuration in battery-backed CMOS, and the battery is a common failure. On AT-class boards the clock/CMOS is often a Dallas DS1287/DS12887 module with the cell sealed inside; it lasts about ten years and then dies, giving 161 / 163 CMOS and clock errors at POST (and sometimes spurious floppy-drive errors). PS/2 planars use a rechargeable barrel or pack battery that leaks and corrodes the board. Replace a dead Dallas module (or rework it with an external coin cell), and on a leaking planar battery remove it and clean the corrosion before it eats the traces.[2]
POST beep and error codes
[edit | edit source]The IBM Power-On Self Test signals faults by beeps and, where a display works, by a numeric code:

| Beeps | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 1 short | Normal POST — system OK |
| 2 short | POST error (numeric code shown on screen) |
| No beep | Power supply or system-board fault |
| Continuous / repeating short | Power supply or system board |
| 1 long, 1 short | System-board fault |
| 1 long, 2 short | Display-adapter fault (MDA/CGA) |
| 1 long, 3 short | Display-adapter fault (EGA/later) |
Common numeric codes include 161/163 (dead CMOS battery/clock), 201 (memory), 301 (keyboard) and 1701 (hard disc). A code ending in the family prefix identifies the failing subsystem.[3]
References
[edit | edit source]- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 minuszerodegrees.net — IBM failure symptoms; Repairing and Restoring an IBM XT; and Adam's Vintage Computer Restorations. Source for the RIFA mains-filter capacitor failing short (smoke) and the tantalum capacitors failing short and preventing the PSU from firing.
- ↑ Fixing a Flat Dallas DS1287 RTC, Classic Computers; and Reworking Dallas RTC Modules, Ardent Tool. Source for the Dallas DS1287/DS12887 internal-battery death (161/163 CMOS errors) and the leaking planar battery.
- ↑ Standard Original IBM POST Error Codes; and IBM — POST beep errors. Source for the IBM POST beep and numeric error codes.
Related Pages
[edit | edit source]- IBM 3270 PC/GX
- IBM 3270 PC/GX Maintenance Guide
- IBM 3270 PC/GX Capacitor Replacement Guide
- IBM 3270 PC/G Troubleshooting Guide — smaller-display sibling, very similar workflow
- IBM 3270 PC Troubleshooting Guide — chassis-level codes
References
[edit | edit source]- IBM SA38-0037-00 (July 1989), Chapter 10.
- IBM GA33-3141-0 (May 1984).