Fanuc 10T system label error


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Thread: Fanuc 10T system label error

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    Default Fanuc 10T system label error

    Hi Guys,

    Every now and then the control throws up a garbled screen or the one in the picture below.

    It always happen while the machine and control is under power.
    Usually I just reboot and everything is fine. On three occasions it did not work to just reboot and then I get the below system label check; ERROR.

    After this I go through the zap memory, input options, restore parameters etc. and that works fine. I would now like to find out what needs replacement to stop this from happening. The control does not have bubble memory and I doubt it has anything to do with the back up batteries as they test fine and as the problem occurs while the machine is powered up. The IPL screen says; END after checking ROM and RAM. Assuming that means OK I guess the memory module is OK. So what should I repair or replace?

    All the best,

    Andy

    Similar Threads:
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Fanuc 10T system label error-fanuc10tscreen1-jpg   Fanuc 10T system label error-fanuc10tscreen2-jpg  


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    I found a small reference to the Label Check Error in the 21i Maintenance manual (I don't have 10-series maintenance manual).
    See attached.

    It suggests clearing SRAM by holding reset+delete then reloading the system software. That probably means parameters, PMC data etc.

    I don't know what 'system software' means exactly but it looks like your machine does not like something in the memory.
    It could be parameters/PMC related or it could be the boot software?
    You say the Memory is ok but the Memory Module and the SRAM Module are not the same thing. They are two different pieces of hardware. The memory check is the DIMM module.
    Maybe your SRAM module is faulty and you need to replace it?

    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Fanuc 10T system label error-labelcheckfail-jpg  


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    By the sound of it, I think what you are describing is the equivalent to what I am doing to recover the machine each time the system fails. It works fine, but the best solution would be to find out why the problem occurs in the first place and then replace the bad component.

    Andy



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    I would start by replacing the SRAM Module.



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    Do you mean the 6 pcs RAM chips on the right hand bottom corner of the mother board or the AD memory card?

    Andy

    Quote Originally Posted by fordav11 View Post
    I would start by replacing the SRAM Module.




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    I would think it'd be a plug-in card of some kind but I don't know the 10-series hardware. I don't have a definitive answer.
    If you post a pic of hardware circuit boards I may be able to see.
    The info should be in any Fanuc 10-series maintenance manual. Unfortunately they are not available in pdf form.



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    I have the maintenance manual. It says there are 6 SRAM ICs on the mother board, but I count 8 pcs. Two are HM6264P-15 and six are HM6264LP-15. All 8 units are 64K each.

    Then there is a plug in type card for additional ROM and RAM called A16B-1210-0381.

    Andy

    Quote Originally Posted by fordav11 View Post
    I would think it'd be a plug-in card of some kind but I don't know the 10-series hardware. I don't have a definitive answer.
    If you post a pic of hardware circuit boards I may be able to see.
    The info should be in any Fanuc 10-series maintenance manual. Unfortunately they are not available in pdf form.




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    ok the eight 6264 chips are common 8k x8 bit Static RAM chips. You can get them on ebay for a few cents each. Common as dirt.
    As long as they are socketed you can swap them easily yourself. If they are soldered into the PCB you will need someone with the required knowledge and equipment to remove and replace them.

    I Googled the A16B-1210-0381 board
    I assume it's this one....
    http://cdn3.iofferphoto.com/img3/ite...8/070/1TME.jpg

    What RAM chips are on there? From the size of them they look like the same type 6264 (i.e. 8k SRAM) , but only two there so a total of 16kb.

    RAM chips are the ones with a number then a dash then a smaller number
    Like HM6264LP-15. The 15 means the speed in nano-seconds and usually it needs to be multiplied by 10. a -15 means 150 nano seconds. The speed of the RAM is quite important if you are going to replace it get the same speed or faster (faster would be -12 or -10 or -9 or -8).

    also if this is the main board I see the 64k SRAM lower right corner. There might be more RAM chips on it. Possibly smaller physical size? Check it closely.
    http://www.cnc-shopping.co.uk/images/A16B-1010-0040.jpg

    however I suspect your problem might be with the SRAM on your A16B-1210-0381 board....

    Last edited by fordav11; 12-10-2011 at 10:16 AM.


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    Thanks for the help,

    I ordered 10 pcs of the cheap 16k IC's from ebay just in case.
    Is there an easy way to determine if an IC is RAM, ROM or something else?
    The mother board is packed with IC's and unless I know what to look for it would be difficult.

    The Ad memory board has two of the same 16K IC's as the two from the mother boards eight SRAMs, HM6264P-15, and there are also two others of same size but made by Intel. They seem to be matched as both has a sticker with the number 1220. I had a look on ebay for boards with same model and revision number and they also had stickers on the Intel IC's with matched numbers, but not same as mine. On the intel IC's the print says;
    D27256-25 on the top row (same number of both). Second row is different between the pair so maybe a manufacturing batch and serial.
    Third row is same on both and reads PGM (a) 12.5V

    Some of these boards has 4 pcs of the intel IC's and there are space for 8 pcs so I believe the intel IC are the ones which stores part programs, offsets etc and the number of intel pairs represent how many meters of equivalent tape memory you have.

    I can buy another board to see but as this problem only occurs maybe every 2 - 3 months it might take half a year to find out which, if any, of the SRAMs is bad.

    As it looks like the control runs a memory test in IPL mode and does not flag ROM or RAM as bad I am wondering if the problem might be elsewhere.
    It is always the System label check that fails. What is the system label and does the system not sit burned in on a dedicated chip? If it does and it is damaged how can the system label be rebuilt by resetting the memory?

    Andy

    Andy

    Last edited by Andy Fritz; 12-10-2011 at 07:15 AM. Reason: spelling


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    the 27256 are common 32k EPROMs. They are probably ok. if not you must buy new chips already programmed or another board because you have no backup of the data inside them.

    The start-up ROM/RAM test only tests main RAM and boot ROM not anything else.

    If you send me a high quality pic of the board I will tell you what every chip does right down to the bit-level ;-)

    With the right equipment you could test each RAM chip. Even so it's a specialized repair job requiring technical electronic knowledge. The best you can do is swap the RAM with known good chips or replace the entire PCB.



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    Thanks! Very good info.

    If the control does not test the total memory on start up it would explain a lot and like you say swapping out cheap SRAM is the best approach. The Ad memory board is only a few 100 USD but I would prefer to chase up every thinkable SRAM chip on the mother board as the MB would cost 2 - 3 K USD to replace. As the manual shows 6 SRAM chips, but there are 8, there might be others with different foot print. If you could help me spot any additional SRAM on the MB from a high res picture that would be great help. I cant upload that here. Maybe you could PM me your email?

    Thanks,

    Andy



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    I guess the SRAM on the motherboard is used as main RAM and work RAM (i.e. some semi-permanent storage while power is on for it's program data plus an area that changes continually). It is connected directly to the CPU so it can be tested because on power-up it contains nothing. To test RAM requires it to be written and read back then compared. If the contents match then the RAM is ok. The additional RAM can not be fully tested because it contains your data, offsets, parameters etc. Writing to it will destroy the data. My best guess is a CRC is created when the power is switched off and on power-on it checks to see if the CRC is the same. If not you get that alarm because it thinks the SRAM has been corrupted somehow. The common parity alarm probably comes from a similar failed CRC check. Also testing every chip on the board takes a lot of time so only the bare minimum is tested in general. Newer PC-based systems are faster and more hardware is tested. I don't know what CPU the 10-series has but it's probably not very fast or powerful.
    6-series used Intel 8086 at 8 or 10 MHz. 15 series used 25MHz 68030 typically used in Macs and Amigas in late 80's/early 90's. 16-series uses 486 CPU. 21-series uses Pentium 233 MMX. The CPU gets faster as technology advances but the CPU alone is not a very powerful device in a very complex system like a CNC controller so testing components is kept to a minimum.

    The AD RAM board probably contains the ladder (in those EPROMs) and the SRAM there is for part program storage, parameters and other volatile data. I'm just guessing though. Probably 'gbowne1' could give you more info about 10-series hardware.

    btw the EPROMs are not re-writable in-circuit. They are Electrically Programmable Read Only Memory (hence EPROM) and require an EPROM programmer to program/re-program them after being erased by exposure to UV light. The sticker on them is probably the ladder software revision or the software version/revision of something. You may be able to check that in the control in the system menu / PMC screen if there is board ID hardware & software revision info listed there..... my 21i has lots of that info

    That technology is very old compared to current CNC systems. Now we have flash ROM and flash cards etc but back then the only way to permanently store small amounts of data was in an EPROM or in RAM with a battery backup (or hard drive etc but that is not relevant here)
    Your best bet is to change the 6264 SRAMs and see what happens.
    I'll PM you as well.

    Last edited by fordav11; 12-10-2011 at 11:59 AM.


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    ok pics received.
    on the Ad RAM board there are 2 smaller RAMs in sockets just above the 6264 chips. can't make out the type exactly but they are definitely RAMs. Pic MB1 has two HM6167 16k x1 bit Static RAMs also in sockets.
    The general trend seems to be that RAM and ROMs are in sockets. most likely to enable quick in-field repairs or upgrades. So just look for chips in sockets (or list the socketed chips here). Anything starting with 27 is an EPROM so ignore it. Also ignore any chip starting with 74LS. It's just logic and repairing a logic fault on a circuit board is beyond 99.9% of people. Just hope it's not a logic fault and move on.
    The other socketed chips should be RAM.
    If you look up 1220 or 041E (the ROM label) somewhere in the system/PMC hardware screens it should give you a hint as to what the board is being used for.
    It's not the ladder because as you suggested the ladder is in the yellow box plugged into the motherboard.If you have FAPT it could be for that.
    You mention the machine stops responding to key input occasionally. That could mean a main board failure due to an issue on the bus connecting the panel I/O hardware to the main board communication hardware (possibly a FIFO/communication issue)
    you can probably find the battery backed RAM very easily by tracing the battery wires to where they go. Then locate some SRAM chips near there and using a digital multi-meter probe the power and ground pins of each chip until you get a positive voltage reading (make sure the machine is powered off of course!). Those chips will hold your programs/offsets/parameters etc. Or just pull each RAM one at a time, re-insert it then power on. If you lose your parameters you know which chips holds that data.

    I still say the easiest thing is to locate all the RAM (in sockets) and change it.

    Last edited by fordav11; 12-10-2011 at 12:12 PM.


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    I have the same software on my 10TF.

    Mine says FS10T9B 1220I too. I just powered up for the first time the other day, after sorting out some I/O issuses with limit switches and stuff from the Operator panel.

    You do have the standard Add ROM/RAM board. A16B-1210-0381.

    My 10TF's main board was expensive.. but it came with tested RAM.

    I just got a lot of 10T documentation in the other day I will look and see what it says about RAM.

    Looks like your trace starts at FFC and FFD addresses.

    I had to put in parameters 4 times before it worked right.

    I still need plenty of help with the 10T though.



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    did you try the procedure shown here? (generate system label)
    http://www.cnczone.com/forums/fanuc/...ity_error.html



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    Quote Originally Posted by fordav11 View Post
    did you try the procedure shown here? (generate system label)
    http://www.cnczone.com/forums/fanuc/...ity_error.html
    Hi, Thanks for looking over the pictures. The generate system label procedure is what I do everytime the machine packs up. It works fine for a month or two. I havn'tt used the lathe so much as it is a bit time conusuming restoring parameters and programs, plus I have another lathe which has been more reliable. Unfortunately the other lathe went down a week ago, hence my renewed motivation fixing the 10T. Will try to pull one RAM module at a time, but would think the system would sense one is gone and throw an error on start up. If the Ad memory board is pulled I get a bus error on start up. Will try to trace it from the battery.

    Andy



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    when I say pull the RAMs I mean pull out an old one and replace it with a new one right there and then. Then power on. Pull and replace with power off. Never power on with missing pieces because it'll just give you alarms.



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    Ah ok that figures. As it now only fails after 2 months or so it would take some time to swap and test the rams. Do you know it there is some type of ram test jig for this old types? They are less than USD 10 for PC memory, but I have not seen them for old memory. That way I could pull out all the ram modules and quickly find the bad one (if any).

    Andy



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    6264's can be tested in many EPROM programmer devices.
    Since they are cheap the easiest way is just change all of them at the same time.



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    Hi there Andy, Ia am geting the same problem with my Miyano cnc Lathe BNC-34, Control Fanuc 10TE, do you have a parameter list as to correct this?



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Fanuc 10T system label error

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