bpsemd,
If the problem stays in <S> all the time, and you've swapped or replaced the TCQA, SDCC and SLCC, and the T/C termination board on <R> and the problem goes away for a short time then reappears it would seem it's poor contact of pins/cables and/or bad cables. It's not difficult to swap 3PL cables between processors, and it might even be possible to swap the JAS with JAR or JAT at the TBQx (the T/C terminal board on <R>) just for a test to see if the problem is the 3PL or the JAS. that would allow you to concentrate your efforts on cabling/contact integrity--instead of card failure(s), which appear to have been ruled out.
Troubleshooting is, many times, a process of elimination--focus your efforts in one area, and that proves unfruitful then move to another area. You seem to have eliminated cards, so now the focus can move to cables and/or contact integrity. When troubleshooting a problem you've never experienced before, try to break it down into discrete areas and then work logically and methodically through each area until you've eliminated those that haven't proved to resolve the problem until you find the area or component that does.
"Be smarter than the equipment," is often my mantra. It's difficult to remember but we are. (Smarter than the equipment.)
The Fortune at the bottom of this page read, "Patience is a form of despair, disguised as virtue." Sometimes that is very true. But don't give up! You've eliminated a lot of things; so it's a safe bet you're close to the resolution!
If the problem stays in <S> all the time, and you've swapped or replaced the TCQA, SDCC and SLCC, and the T/C termination board on <R> and the problem goes away for a short time then reappears it would seem it's poor contact of pins/cables and/or bad cables. It's not difficult to swap 3PL cables between processors, and it might even be possible to swap the JAS with JAR or JAT at the TBQx (the T/C terminal board on <R>) just for a test to see if the problem is the 3PL or the JAS. that would allow you to concentrate your efforts on cabling/contact integrity--instead of card failure(s), which appear to have been ruled out.
Troubleshooting is, many times, a process of elimination--focus your efforts in one area, and that proves unfruitful then move to another area. You seem to have eliminated cards, so now the focus can move to cables and/or contact integrity. When troubleshooting a problem you've never experienced before, try to break it down into discrete areas and then work logically and methodically through each area until you've eliminated those that haven't proved to resolve the problem until you find the area or component that does.
"Be smarter than the equipment," is often my mantra. It's difficult to remember but we are. (Smarter than the equipment.)
The Fortune at the bottom of this page read, "Patience is a form of despair, disguised as virtue." Sometimes that is very true. But don't give up! You've eliminated a lot of things; so it's a safe bet you're close to the resolution!
