IBM PS/2 Model 30 Maintenance Guide
This guide documents preventive maintenance procedures for the IBM PS/2 Model 30 (machine type 8530), covering both the original Model 30 8086 (8530-002 / 021) and the later Model 30 286 (8530-E01 / E21 / E31 / E41). The Model 30 is a desktop-form-factor PS/2 with no integrated CRT (unlike the Model 25), so the system unit can be opened and serviced at the bench with low electrical risk to the technician.
Safety Warning
editThe Model 30 PSU rectifies mains directly and holds a charge on its bulk capacitor for tens of seconds after power-off. Before any work inside the PSU shell:
- Power off and unplug the mains lead.
- Wait at least 30 seconds.
- Discharge the bulk capacitor through a 1 kΩ / 5 W resistor between its two terminals.
- Verify with a multimeter.
There is no CRT inside the Model 30 itself, so the lethal CRT-anode procedure from the IBM PS/2 Model 25 Maintenance Guide is not needed unless servicing the matching IBM 8503 / 8512 / 8513 / 8514 PS/2 monitor.
Identifying Your Model
editThe two Model 30 generations are distinguished by:
| Marker | Model 30 8086 | Model 30 286 |
|---|---|---|
| Front badge | "Personal System/2" with no "286" | "Personal System/2 / 286" |
| CPU at planar U-position | Intel 8086 | Intel 80286 in PGA socket |
| ISA bus on riser | 8-bit only | 16-bit (longer connector) |
| Aux power connector | absent | present (4-pin to ISA bus) |
| Hardware RTC | absent — date/time set every boot | present (Dallas DS1287 / DS12887) |
| Video | MCGA — only on integrated DSUB | VGA — full 16-colour 640×480 |
| FDD type at install | 720 KB | 1.44 MB |
Submodel and IBM machine type are printed on the rear panel label (e.g. "Type 8530-E21").
Opening the System Unit
editTools: Philips #2 screwdriver and an anti-static strap.
- Power off and unplug all cables (mains, keyboard, mouse, monitor, parallel, serial).
- Locate the two thumbscrews at the rear of the chassis (one each side, near the top).
- Loosen both thumbscrews; the cover slides back about 10 mm and lifts off upwards.
- The drive cage sits over the planar at the front-right. The PSU is at the front-left. The MCA / ISA riser card mounts to the rear-right corner.
Cards on the riser are held with plastic captive thumb-fittings. Drives are held with the IBM "blue plastic crowbar" push-pin system — pry the tabs gently with the plastic crowbar supplied with the machine, or with a thin plastic spudger. Do not use a metal screwdriver — the captive pins crack easily.
Regular Cleaning
edit- Soft brush + low-pressure compressed air for the planar, riser, drives and PSU vents. Hold any fan blades by hand if using compressed air.
- Clean the keyboard / pointing-device Mini-DIN connectors with a deoxidising contact cleaner sparingly on a foam swab.
- Clean the parallel (DB-25) and serial (DB-9 or DB-25 depending on submodel) connectors.
- Inspect the planar for any signs of leaked electrolyte (brown crust around aluminium electrolytic capacitors). The Model 30 is generally less prone to cap leakage than the Model 70 / 80, but inspect anyway.
PSU Voltage Checks
editProbe the PSU output rails at the planar power connector with a multimeter while the system is powered on.
| Rail | Acceptable range |
|---|---|
| +5 V | +4.75 V to +5.25 V |
| +12 V | +11.4 V to +12.6 V |
| −5 V | −4.75 V to −5.25 V |
| −12 V | −11.4 V to −12.6 V |
The Model 30 PSU is rated 70 W (early production) or 80 W (later production, including some 8530-E units). The IBM Model 55 PSU is documented as a drop-in replacement.
CMOS / RTC Battery (Model 30 286 only)
editThe Model 30 8086 has no hardware RTC — date and time must be set manually from DOS at every boot. There is no battery to replace.
The Model 30 286 uses a Dallas DS1287 / DS12887 RTC module integrated with the lithium cell. When the battery runs down, POST reports:
- 161 — CMOS configuration empty (battery failure).
- 162 — CMOS checksum mismatch.
- 163 — Time and date not set.
Replacement is by desoldering the 24-pin DIP DS1287 / DS12887 from the planar and fitting a fresh Dallas DS12887+ or a Dallas-cell-extracted equivalent. After replacement, boot the Reference Diskette and run SETUP to re-enter memory size, drive type and date/time.
Some restorers cut the DS1287's plastic case to expose the internal cell and add an external CR2032 holder; this works but is not as clean as a full module swap.
Connector Care
edit- PS/2 keyboard / mouse (Mini-DIN-6): Plastic key in the connector aligns the plug; do not force.
- Keyboard / pointing-device fuse on the planar (3 A) protects the +5 V to both ports. A blown fuse produces a 305 keyboard error at POST.
- Parallel port (DB-25 female) and Serial port (DB-9) are standard.
- Earphone connector (1/4" mono jack) at the rear routes the PC speaker through a passive divider for external amplification.
Single-Cable Drive Interface
editThe Model 30 uses the PS/2 single-cable diskette and hard-drive interface. Power and data are carried in one ribbon cable from the planar to the drive. Care points:
- Pin 1 is marked with a red or blue stripe on the cable. Always align stripe-to-stripe.
- Drive power is +5 V and +12 V routed through the planar; do not modify the cable to add Molex outputs.
- Drives have no dust shutter on the front bezel — dust accumulates and contaminates heads. Clean periodically with a head-cleaning diskette.
Floppy Drive Maintenance
edit- The Model 30 ships with 720 KB or 1.44 MB drives depending on submodel.
- Use only the appropriate media type: DSDD for 720 KB drives, DSHD for 1.44 MB.
- Replace the drive belt if the drive is the Mitsubishi MF355C-family with a stretched/perished belt.
- Aluminium electrolytic capacitors on the drive logic board age and can leak; if the drive becomes slow or unreliable, recap the drive logic board with low-ESR 105 °C equivalents.
The drive logic board commonly carries 47 µF / 16 V and 10 µF / 25 V electrolytics. The brown crust of leaked electrolyte around these caps is a recognised PS/2 floppy-drive failure mode.
Hard Drive Maintenance
editThe Model 30 hard disk interface is proprietary planar-integrated ST-506 — not ESDI, not standard MFM, and not IDE. Only a limited set of drives (specifically the two or three IBM-supplied parts in the original 8530-021 / E21 / E31 / E41 kits) are recognised.
- These drives are famously failure-prone.
- If the drive does not spin up, suspect head stiction — gently rotate the drive case while powered off. This is a stop-gap; replace the drive at the earliest opportunity.
- Replacement options are limited because the BIOS only supports the original drive types in CMOS. An XT-IDE card on the ISA bus, an SD-based emulator, or a modern MFM emulator are practical replacements.
The hard drive sits in a metal caddy held to the chassis by the IBM plastic-captive push-pin mechanism.
Capacitor Health
editTantalum capacitors on the planar (mostly 10 µF / 16 V on the +5 V and +12 V rails) can fail short-circuit and prevent the PSU from starting. The Model 30 is generally less affected than the Model 70 / 80 by aged electrolytics, but inspect the planar for any leaked electrolyte or bulged caps. Full procedure: IBM PS/2 Model 30 Capacitor Replacement Guide.
Recommended Tools
edit- Philips #2 screwdriver.
- Anti-static strap.
- Digital multimeter.
- IPA + foam swabs for connector cleaning.
- Soldering iron with fine tip + solder wick for RTC and capacitor work.
- Spare Dallas DS12887+ for Model 30 286 RTC.
- Period-correct or modern equivalent Model 30 Reference Diskette image (model-specific).
- Plastic crowbar / spudger for the captive push-pin fittings.
Related Pages
editReferences
edit- IBM PS/2 Model 30 — DOS Days. Source for the PSU rating (70 W), proprietary ST-506 hard drive interface, ISA-only expansion, drive caddy and Sony 1.44 MB compatibility.
- IBM PS/2 Model 30 Quick Reference, Ardent Tool of Capitalism. Source for the submodel list, FRU details and the captive push-pin mechanism.
- PS/2 Error Codes, Ardent Tool. Reference for the 161/162/163 RTC cluster and the dead-system isolation procedure.
- IBM, IBM Personal System/2 Hardware Maintenance Reference (S52G-9971 series).