@Doomstrike @danderson it's not USB powered, it has a separate power supply. The symptoms I got were all without even plugging in USB.
@hp @danderson ah OK so. I'd go for the caps then. Two failing boards says to me it is something time related, and everything else there should be largely unaffected, unless any obvious corrosion etc.
@Doomstrike @danderson Well, ordered a set of caps of various values. I'll let you know if it does anything!
@hp @Doomstrike Good luck! Fingers crossed.
A long time ago, I helped someone fix an HDMI receiver that was intermittently failing to power on, which involved replacing half a dozen caps in that form factor. None of them had visibly failed, but some combination of them had degraded enough that successful boot had become probabilistic and heavily temperature dependent. Similar symptoms, some LEDs would light and chips warm up a bit, but no activity. After cap swap, good as new, <1s bootup.
@hp @Doomstrike re that IC being 40-50C, I'm not a magic smoke doctor but that seems like a tolerable amount of heat, if it settles at that level. It's toasty, but I don't _think_ so much that it'd be awful junction temperature on the inside. Plastic enclosure might get a bit warm as it dissipates that to atmosphere, but not hot enough to be a safety concern, and 🤷 cheaper to not bother with fancier cooling if the chip's not in danger, is the usual mass production ethos.
@hp @Doomstrike It could also cool down more once it boots successfully. If there's not enough supply rail capacitance, one possible failure mode is the microcontroller initializes, tries to power up some hungrier parts of itself or the board, that extra current draw causes the supply rail voltage to droop, triggers brownout protection, microcontroller resets, rinse, repeat. Effectively running at 100% utilization in a boot loop, instead of initializing then being mostly in low power sleep.
@danderson @Doomstrike That's a good point! We shall see!
I'll replace the caps, I should get them on Sunday. Should be an easy job.
@danderson @Doomstrike I have two more zip drives of a slightly different vintage that are also broken.
I'm beginning to think these devices really, really suck.
@hp @Doomstrike Skimming the history of zip drives, I'm not surprised. They had a 4-year reign between data growth making floppies impractical and CD-R taking over, and only shipped a single design in that time. Probably different manufacturing spins, but that's not a ton of time to iterate on reliability. And then in 1998 they got a class action lawsuit for high failure rates, apparently?
Certainly doesn't paint a picture of being a paragon of reliability.
@danderson @Doomstrike Well, I definitely have two models that are very, very different from each other.
All broken though :)
@danderson @hp @Doomstrike I used to own an internal 100Mb SCSI version, later on upgrading to 750Mb USB.
They were very unreliable - see "click of death".
@hp @Doomstrike Huh, all 100MB? They sold them with a bunch of different bus interfaces, so shows what I know I guess.
@danderson @Doomstrike the PCBs are completely different, as is the actual drive mechanism.
The more you know! 😄