A Zener diode with the designation W150 (often in connection with 1.3W to 1.5W power) is a
Silicon power Zener diode specifically designed to stabilize or limit voltages to a nominal value of 150 volts. These diodes are used in power supplies, surge protection circuits and clipping circuits.
Important technical data and characteristics:
Zener voltage (
): 150 V
Power consumption (
): Typical 1.3 W, 1.5 W or 2 W, depending on the exact design
Design: Often axially wired, e.g. DO-41 or DO-204AM
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I find it very odd that they are feeding A.C. directly into a zener like that, without any rectification. Are you certain that it is really A.C. coming into the PCB? Or is there rectification happening on the power board? Have you observed the power with an oscilloscope? Could you be mistaking half-wave D.C. for (a lower voltage) A.C. ?
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It's not the "conventional" use of a zener, but I think I see what's going on. D5+C5 are acting as a voltage drop, and that 560 ohm resistor presents the voltage being delivered to the circuit. That's the only explanation I can think of for the + side of C6, D5, and C5 "going nowhere". Still, this looks wrong to me. But you often see this sort of thing in circuits of this vintage, and they require rather detailed and in-depth analysis to truly figure them out. But, if it is a voltage drop then the rating of the zener is NOT the voltage delivered to the circuit, but rather 20 - that.
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