Post Reply 
New (to me) 41CX and a question
05-19-2022, 02:15 PM
Post: #5
RE: New (to me) 41CX and a question
Aloha,

Nice calcs!

You might want to get a bottle of deoxit, progold and get a copy of the very excellent hp-41 repair book:

https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B000...UTF8&psc=1
https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B001...UTF8&psc=1
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08JJD...0df70867f0

I got the kindle version and I think I shall order the printed one as well.

Since you have already done a post repair I'll assume you already know how to get in there and don't really need the book, and you might not need the deoxit or progold, and they are nice to have.

I also will get myself one of those fiberglas pens! Thanks Bob!

Here's the catch with battery terminals. They can look clean, but the problem is actually underneath where the flex board wraps to the expansion ports.

I decided to check the function on my 3 NOS 41C's last night, and I discovered they are not NOS, I just had bought very nice almost complete boxes. That makes more sense anyway. I was motivated to check because a CX with some paperwork went out for $375 on ebay yesterday. Yow! I'm sure it's a very nice calc and I see the barest hint of green on the battery terminals. It's an '88 halfnut, and it looks like there may be battery terminals in the power adapter port. I used to know this stuff offhand, and I don't recall that there were any 88's with battery terminals. It's possible this has been repaired. But the battery terminals go with the back, and the serial number is on the back, so it seems more likely I'm wrong about this. Then again, it may be possible to add the terminals, which is just more confusing!

https://www.ebay.com/itm/165478326094?nm...7675.l2557

On my boxed 41C there was some green cancer and I used deoxit on the terminals and I could get some life in the display, so I know I will be able to get it working again. Hopefully I got the deoxit in there enough to resist further corrosion. I'm guessing I bought it knowing there had been a repair as there is some copper foil on the two center conductors on the battery connector which would have been in any pictures. Part of the reason I bought it was because it was sold at the Iowa State Bookstore while I was a student there and I got it from the original owner.

This motivated me to dig out my old '2034 C (1980 tall keys) as it has bad corrosion and I thought I better get it arrested. I used deoxit on the battery terminals and it had a little life in the display. Since it was mostly missing the feet, I decided to dive on in as I would not be messing up said feet. What I found inside was surprising. Not only was there corrosion on the zebra connector wrapping around, there was corrosion on the circuit board traces. All cleaned up easily with deoxit. The most interesting thing was the solder drop on the zebra connector where it pressed to the circuit board. Clearly this had also been repaired. I don't recall the owner telling me it had been repaired, but this was 25 years ago. I bought it because of the tall keys and it came with a card reader, which I did not have one at that time.

Let's see if a link from OneDrive works ...

https://1drv.ms/u/s!AkfXbjQEO0N2hNVcUmly...A?e=n04oNu

I got a lot of corrosion off of it:

https://1drv.ms/u/s!AkfXbjQEO0N2hNVLW2Oa...w?e=kiChql

The takeaways here are:

1) If you are serious about buying a nice 41 and are willing to pay the price (see ebay above), you can't assume the current owner knows the full history of a calculator that may be 40 years old. Educate yourself, look super closely at pictures, and ask for more if you need them.

I don't know if I would be willing to pay $375 for a CX when I can buy a DM41 for so much less. 25 years ago it was cool to try to have one of absolutely everything, but it seems a bit insane now. If I had returned and caught up on things a year ago I would have turned a C into a CL. I have a lot of manuals and stuff that are probably of value only to serious collectors at this point as there is no reason to buy them.

As a serious collector, it's going to be worthwhile to educate yourself which will save you money and tears!

2) If you have the green cancer, it gets to the underside of the foil and it will eventually eat away everything. Deoxit is likely the best defense against this ongoing corrosion. The tall keys C pictured above is working, and I'm going to get a new part from the calculator shop when I go to fully repair this guy.

I am quite confident that if there is *any* cancer and put the calc in a box for 20 years, it's gonna have a lot of green on it if you didn't use deoxit :-)

A nice addition to the family!

Mahalo

HP-45/65/67,HP-10/11/12/15/16c,HP-21/25/25c/29c,HP-31e/32e/33e/34c,HP-41C/V/X,HP-22s/27s/32sii/42s,HP-48s/gx,HP-35s,more
Find all posts by this user
Quote this message in a reply
Post Reply 


Messages In This Thread
New (to me) 41CX and a question - Xorand - 05-18-2022, 07:59 PM
RE: New (to me) 41CX and a question - DrewNicholson - 05-19-2022 02:15 PM



User(s) browsing this thread: