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unixronin: Galen the technomage, from Babylon 5: Crusade (Default)
Unixronin

December 2012

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Thursday, October 28th, 2004 02:36 pm

I have a HP48G graphing calculator on which the on/off/cancel button has gone very flaky.  It will no longer power on just by pressing on -- at minimum, a warm-start (on-c) is required; I can't power it off -- I have to wait for it to shut itself off; and I can't cancel operations or clear error messages.

HP no longer offers service on the HP48G, and it's pretty tough right now to justify the cost of replacing it with a HP48GII (around $110) or HP49G+ (around $150).  Does anyone know of a repair procedure for a flaky HP48G key (above and beyond the non-trivial problem of getting the never-intended-to-be-opened-after-manufacture case open)?

Thursday, November 4th, 2004 06:52 pm (UTC)
highly possible that it is a loose post. The post you'd have to pry apart to take the case apart, in fact.

try lightly climping down the bottom left edge of the calculator and see if the button works more reliably.

for repair services, possibly including trading out for a working unit, see www.hpmuseum.org message boards.

all else fails, I *can* fix, but it might take a while. Or trade me your 15C for one of the nice 48GX high contrast black LCD models :)


I assume you have 48X for windows/mac/*nix, fantastic emulator. I've also got some DOS runnable simulators for the 41 series.

Thursday, November 4th, 2004 07:39 pm (UTC)
highly possible that it is a loose post. The post you'd have to pry apart to take the case apart, in fact. try lightly climping down the bottom left edge of the calculator and see if the button works more reliably.

Hmmm, whaddayaknow ...... that does indeed seem to make a world of difference.

Assuming it's not merely behaving itself better today, any suggestions on how to make a more permanent repair? Any tips on how I get the metal front cover off without damaging it? If I can do that, I can probably fix the post....
Friday, November 5th, 2004 10:36 am (UTC)
hrm,

I don't think it is so much a matter of removing the metal plate. IIRC (and I haven't taken apart a 48 series machine in a little while) the basic fix is from the back. it is even possible that a really really tiny amount of aerobic epoxy (superglue is anearobic and doesn't really work well for this, aside from discoloring plastics) syringed into the lower edge where the two halves meet and then clamped down overnight might do it.

Parsing that sentence should be fun :)

you obviously don't want to get anything into the electronics, but there is a lip where the two halves meet - you should have photos of what the casing looks like. If it's not clear, then don't do it, of course.

if you do go through the long and slow process of carefully taking the whole case apart, you might want to look at putting in one of the internal RAM upgrades. 512K internal will fit a LOT of data, including the *nix like OS (shellOS) and metakernel.

more is always available at www.hpcalc.org



www.hp48.org
Thursday, November 4th, 2004 07:48 pm (UTC)
Oh, and no, I don't have 48X ... and if I can't fix this (or maybe even if I can) I might very seriously consider that 15C-for-48GX trade. I very seldom use the 15C, truthfully.

Of course, I haven't really used my 48G in so long I've forgotten 90% of how to use it...
Friday, November 5th, 2004 10:37 am (UTC)
not sure where to find 48X right now. It is a complete and truly fine emulator for most Xfree86 systems. google that one :)

a lot of good programming info is on the hpcalc website, too. But there is always the question of do you really want to get into it.