So I recently mentioned that I was looking for a dead CPU card and, thanks to jamesdenton, that's about to be fulfilled (just waiting on the postman). James has generously allowed me to completely depopulate it and scan it for reference for this task, but I need to find someone/somewhere with a 1200dpi scanner that can handle this board.
Stupidly, I had forgotten to start a thread about my work on the RAM card, so that will get posted shortly; until then, some background. I've taken a step back from repairing my Lisa 2 to address another issue I'd run into - the lack of generally available replacement hardware. One of the problems I'm facing (arguably, the greatest) is my I/O board; while the motherboard escaped relatively unscathed, the I/O board is heavily damaged. As I removed components to asses damage, it became apparent that the corrosion was much more widespread and thorough than initially presumed. Frustrated, I started exploring the possibility of outright replacement of the I/O board and found that, while new replacements existed, they were generally unobtanium. Not that I wasn't interested in repairing my own, but the amount and extent of damage was very daunting. After taking a break from working on my Lisa, I played around with the idea of just recreating the card stack altogether: what if someone owned a Lisa chassis but no brain for it; what would it take for them to just... make one? Eventually, I got pointed in AlexTheCat123's direction by someone on TinkerDifferent and decided to reach out. As a result, I opted to chase after reproducing some of the card stack that Alex hadn't had a chance to look at yet, namely the RAM and CPU cards.
While work on the RAM card is basically 99% done (I'm taking my eyes off it for a couple weeks so I can come back with a fresh perspective to check for errors), work on the CPU card has been underway for about a week now. The schematics have been replicated and I'll be starting in on the board layout once I have the scans in hand; all said and done, this was about a weeks worth of work in my free time so I'm happy it went as fast as it did. I got this done in about the same time it took me to do the RAM card's schematics, so I'm going to interpret that as having at least advanced my skills a little bit, lol. I'm definitely not looking forward to laying down all the traces, as the number of them is substantially higher than the RAM card. It may be a couple of few weeks before this is ready, but I'm looking forward to it being done. I'm aiming for this to be as close to a 1:1 reproduction as I can manage, but I plan on making a couple of very minute "quality of life" improvements to this thing. Two of which are: a) adding traces for factory bodge wires that will be attached to jumpers and, b) moving the ceramic cap attached to the legs of U5C to dedicated pads nearby. Like I said, infinitesimal changes, but they'll help make the board just a little less cluttered.
Here's where I am at the moment - this should look better in a few days, lol...