After taking that pic, I got done cleaning the CBM. The entire Body, Board and keys all look a lot better now and im glad to say that after all of that, it turned on no problem as well! (Before and after)

Now that I finally get to use this thing properly, there are a couple of oddities which are worth a second look I reccon!

For one, it runs Basic V1, so I asume this machine must be from the early run of production? The 2 chip expansions which can be seen on the board, seem to be “Exbasic: Level II” which is a Basic Expansion sorta thing that replaces the original Basic if loaded. It too, fully works.

3 of the issues I noticed thus far is that for one, pressing the " Button has some odd effects on the top row of the num pad, in which if I press a button up there, instead of them doing thier normal thing, they type in Letters and Symbols with the Background change thing. Pressing " again reverts it back to normal… still quite annoying tho, since those are were the cursor keys are at. I’ve also cleaned both the keyboard as well as its actual Circuitboard underneath, so I’m not sure whats causing this.

Another odditie is that sometimes at pure random, all the Characters on screen change to @'s and P’s… then they revert back after a minute or two…

And for the final thing I’ll definetly wanna fix with no clue how, is that the Monitor is oddly Zoomed out. The text is all further back then it should be making for a weird look. Old Burn-in from when this thing was actively used also assures me of that. No clue how one can fix that, any suggestions?

Also working on getting a SD-2-PET so I can run games and Diagnostics too, but thats for some another time! I also wanna thank this community for all the feedback! Couldn’t have gotten this thing running if it wasnt for you!

  • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    Very nice!!

    Now, do you know the syntax to run anything on it? That was my problem with my BBC Micro XD

    Also you need to be very careful working inside the monitor, particularly as you’ve run it recently. There are some beefy capacitors in there that store a potentially fatal charge.

    • Hyperreality@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      The trick is to touch them with the back of your hand, so that the shock causes you to clench your fist and arm, and punch yourself in the face for being a fucking moron who almost killed himself.

    • Mr.Mofu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      10 months ago

      Thank you all for helping me so much! Truly couldn’t have done any of this without the help and support all of you gave me!

  • mox@lemmy.sdf.org
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    10 months ago

    If you don’t get answers to your remaining issues here, you might see what responses turn up if you tell the whole story (and link the photos) over at Hacker News. I reckon there are at least a few readers over there who would enjoy it, and I wouldn’t be surprised if some of them recognize the symptoms you describe.

    Posting during weekday business hours is probably best for visibility.

  • intelisense@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    This is a blast from the past… My first computer was a Commodore Pet - though I recall it had a built-in tape drive? I learned to program on it and ended up having a career in software engineering. I still have a soft spot for it…

    • Mr.Mofu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      10 months ago

      Yeah that was the 2001 Series PET, only from 1977! Must’ve been an interessting experience typing in that original “Mickey Mouse” Keyboard they had

  • wjrii@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    And for the final thing I’ll definetly wanna fix with no clue how, is that the Monitor is oddly Zoomed out. The text is all further back then it should be making for a weird look. Old Burn-in from when this thing was actively used also assures me of that. No clue how one can fix that, any suggestions?

    Most CRT displays have potentiometers, adjustable by screw or knob, to control horizontal and vertical size. As always, be careful with flyback transformers, etc., so as not to die.

    Burn in is a real and AFAIK permanent thing.

  • Altima NEO@lemmy.zip
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    10 months ago

    Watch some of Adrian Black’s videos on YouTube where he works on monitors. He shows how he does some adjustments to correct funky image calibration.

  • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    Great to see one in such good condition! This is a special computer for me. In the late 1970s our primary school headmaster realized computers would be important and bought one (a CBM 3032 or 4032) for the school. It was very exciting; we had never seen anything like it. We’d book time during lunchbreak to use it, and he started a computing class where we learned BASIC and showed each other our programs. I still view the PET/CBM as the archetypal computer, and that green screen gives me thrills, as do the keys with symbols on the front sides.