"N_Cook" <div...@tcp.co.uk> wrote in message
news:i26v0g$l9b$1...@news.eternal-september.org...
You're a braver man that I am Mr Cook. I've seen 2 of these and decided on
both occasions not to touch it with a barge pole.
Perhaps that's a sign of getting older and wiser. - some jobs you really do
need to refuse for your own personal well being.
Good luck,
Gareth.
"Gareth Magennis" <sound....@btconnect.com> wrote in message
news:urJ1o.2844$FM1.1896@hurricane...
Don't know about you, but I'm finding more and more that these big power
amps are not worth repairing, due to the low cost of replacements. The shop
that I do a lot of work for will often tell me not to spend more than half
an hour making sure that it's not a really simple problem, as a replacement
can be had for a couple of hundred quid or less. Suits me just fine as I
still get an examination fee, without the thought of all the potential grief
of replacing a bunch of output transistors, and trying to ensure that it
doesn't all go bang again when you've finished. As you say, perhaps a case
of getting older and wiser. Not so many years back, I was up for any repair,
just for the challenge of not being defeated. These days, it's about making
a living, and if a repair does defeat me, it's just san fairy ann and on to
the next one ...
Arfa
At least the schema are around. Some notes in passing, you have to be
careful how you pick up that large pcb , by the heatsinks and front
metalwork not by the edge or rear as those large piercings make it weak.
Discharging the rectified mains DC cap of course. Maybe all component
oles( certainly the 4 off 1Meg Rs) are the size for power transistor legs or
IC-pin eyelets so although plated through holes , minor components like 1/3W
Rs have a lot of solder around the leads so libility to cracking I would
think.
"N_Cook" <div...@tcp.co.uk> wrote in message
news:i29h5a$m4p$1...@news.eternal-september.org...
> Not actually the 1meg failed it was the TO92 over the complementary 1meg
> gone 35uA leaky, pulling the zero point upwards
>
>
So, how did your lead-free lecture turn out last week ? Well received ? Did
you video it ?
Arfa
outline from the .ppt here
http://www.divdev.fsnet.co.uk/scicaf2.htm
interested enough to have 3/4 hour of Q&A afterwards.
Someone from one of the PbF exempted industries there saying they were
having horrendous problems specifying and actually obtaining lead-free-free
components , there is a lot of fraudulent specification paperwork around
apparently.
And someone else from gas-fitting, no problem there as such, they just
charge the customers £250 for a new controller board when it is just PbF
solder failings on the not so old previous board, subjected to normal
in-service conditions but too much heat for pbf.
Arrrrgggg!
I just repaired a 600 watt Coolmax PC PSU that had defective PBf
soldering. Don't -ever- buy that brand, they are very poorly assembled.
"N_Cook" <div...@tcp.co.uk> wrote in message
news:i2bfro$df7$1...@news.eternal-september.org...
Yes, I've come across this one. Apparently, there's quite a lot of problems
caused on these PbF boards, by relay hammer, which leads to the joints on
those devices fracturing. The real bummer on this though, is that the boards
have been manufactured in lead-free to help the environment (according to
the green mist eco-bollox brigade, anyway) but what's actually happening is
the things are failing *because* of the lead-free solder, and then a
perfectly otherwise serviceable board, which could easily be repaired, is
being replaced as a service spare, much like a faulty gas valve or pump
motor or whatever, because the person who calls out to fix the fault is a
plumber, and has little or no electronic savvy. A person who I know that is
a plumber, says that his garage is full of scrap boards, and that every now
and then, he just collects them all up and takes them to the tip. How green
and eco friendly is that ? I've been trying to persuade him to collect a big
bag of them up for me to take off his hands, but no luck so far ... I
wonder if the control boards from other appliances like washing machines and
dishwashers suffer the same because of lead-free construction. Actually
there is a little domestic electrical sales and repair shop next to one of
our cafes. Next time I'm down there, I will pop in and see the owner and ask
him. There might be some mileage in this. I'm thinking purely from the
business angle and wads in my pocket of course, rather than the green issues
... :-)
Arfa
Jim
On Jul 21, 6:51 am, "N_Cook" <dive...@tcp.co.uk> wrote:
> Goes into protect mode at switch on.
> Useful info and schema on these G class ampshttp://www.reptips.dk/Reptips/CAUDIO.pdf
Jim
reply
No valid emails used on usenet
The one with leaky TO92 repaired and waiting for owner to return from
holiday.
Second one initially looked at , problems again in a TO02 device in a
different area of one amp, gone B-C-E shorted so more obvious a problem.
Waiting for owner to return before progressing on that one. Third one not
looked at other than also goes into protect and no obvious problems with the
TO3s , perhaps so well protected that rarely do the YO3s get a chance to
fail.
I will use a valid email account to contact you