So last thing Sat, after everyone else had gone, Mark and I had a look at Paul D's MTX to try and work out why it was having video issues. By the time Mark had to leave for the long drive we still hadn't duplicated the fault, even with the extra load on the PSU of driving a CFX-II on the expansion connector.
Still I was able to get a shot of the MTX driving 3 separate screens

- Three screens.jpg (1009.26 KiB) Viewed 39857 times
Sunday morning before Paul was due I had a further play with the board before Paul arrived to collect it on his way home.
It looked like one of the capacitors on the Video Daughterboard could possibly be shorting to a via on motherboard. Once small piece of insulating tape later the potential short was history. An hour long soak test and still no problems so hopefully that's one system fixed at least for now.
The 2nd repair booked for Sunday Morning was Jim with his red MTX. Which had no display.
We connecter it up to the monitor, and as expected the display was blank. However in order to know whether we had a black screen which is a common fault, or a blue one we connected the old TV. Which produced a flashing cursor and "Seady" and a few random exclamation marks on an otherwise working display. We swapped the daughter board and then on the next re-boot had the same display on both screens.
An close examination of Jim's daughter board provided the answer. The was no link in either of the 2 jumpers that allow colour or mono composite output. Fitting one link solved the missing display problem.
I plugged in the CFX-II board so that the start-up screen would give us a display to help diagnose the corruption of "Ready" into "Seady" and it was obvious that the lowest bit of the display ram wasn't outputting correctly. The Circuit diagram suggested this should be the chip in location G4 which we confirmed with a 10R resistor grounding Pin 14. That chip came out and was replaces with a socket and one of the re-cycled 4116 chips from the spares box. Video corruption solved.

- Red MTX Board fixes.jpg (1009.02 KiB) Viewed 39857 times