About the drawings.
All drawings have been made with a professional electronical CAD program and such programs do not output in GIF, JPEG or bitmap fomat. In fact, it is difficult to convert vector type drawings to bitmaps and scale them without losing quality. Also, the resolution on today's monitors are really on the limit to display a complete drawing in the way I made them.
Currently I have drawings only in PCL4 bitmap format. PCL4 or PCL5 is the language used by all HP compatible laser printers. If you don't have access to an HP compatible printer, try to borrow one and if you don' like drawings in this format, throw them away and don't complain! One day, I might convert them to postscript but I need a program to scale postscript and I need time to do it.
The drawings are made in format A4 (210x297mm) but it has been confirmed by a North American that they print out OK on legal size paper at least when using an HP 660 Bubble Jet. I don't know if legal size is the same all over the world. However, this document and the drawings are made for non (North) Americans who want to modify their modules to 220V and most part of this group is metric and knows what is an A4 format. Also I am tired of American programs that say this paper size (A4) is not supported or not supported with this kind of device. That happened, among other cases, with my old sheet (shit) feeder for a Panasonic matrix printer under Windows 3.1. Finally I can get a little bit of revenge :-)
These files are to be considered as binary and can contain any characters, even MSDOS, Unix EOFs and ASCII 0s! Under MSDOS use "copy XXXXX.PCL LPT1 /B" to get binary output. The DOS "PRINT" will not work. It might perhaps not work on some "redirected network printers". In some cases you would have to type something like "copy con lpt1 Enter ^L^Z Enter" to eject the drawing or press continue on the printer. With ^L^Z, I mean control-L and Control-Z. To print these drawings under Unix, just use "lp xxxxx.pcl". In some cases, you might need "lp -oraw xxxxxx.pcl".
If you only get part of the drawing this ususally means that you can not correctly print a binary file and this is usually because your network printer driver encountered an EOF in the file. Try to connect the printer straight to you computer or try on another computer.
If I need to convert some more modules, I will try to supply information by updating these files and in some cases I might also create schematics.
If you find some drawings or modification to 220V for some other modules, please send them to me. Send me a mail to tell me from where I can download them.