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Bit of luck for once.
My ancient workshop amp failed. Took the mains fuse - and a replacement.
It was assembled from bits I had lying around - including a mains transformer I've not quite sure what it was made for. And of course it's always the most expensive bit that fails... Turned out to be the rectifier. Nice cheap fix - had a spare. -- *Windows will never cease * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Bit of luck for once.
I remember back in the days of the first vcrs. A Philips 1501 would cut out
for no apparent reason. In the end after much messing about running it with the bottom hinged down, two Mullard rectifiers were removed from the pcb and found to have lose wires in the green/blue mouldings on one end I took out the other two as well and replaced them with an assortment of reclaimed rectifiers culled from old junked gear and never another problem. It seems to me that when companies first started to encapsulate things the movement under heating and cooling over time was a common failure mode Since then before I lost my sight, I have had cause to change these Byxxx rectifiers many times in equipment. This component will self destruct in 4 years. Brian -- ----- - This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please! "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... My ancient workshop amp failed. Took the mains fuse - and a replacement. It was assembled from bits I had lying around - including a mains transformer I've not quite sure what it was made for. And of course it's always the most expensive bit that fails... Turned out to be the rectifier. Nice cheap fix - had a spare. -- *Windows will never cease * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Bit of luck for once.
In article ,
Brian Gaff wrote: I remember back in the days of the first vcrs. A Philips 1501 would cut out for no apparent reason. In the end after much messing about running it with the bottom hinged down, two Mullard rectifiers were removed from the pcb and found to have lose wires in the green/blue mouldings on one end I took out the other two as well and replaced them with an assortment of reclaimed rectifiers culled from old junked gear and never another problem. It seems to me that when companies first started to encapsulate things the movement under heating and cooling over time was a common failure mode Since then before I lost my sight, I have had cause to change these Byxxx rectifiers many times in equipment. This component will self destruct in 4 years. It does seem to be one of the less common failures I've come across here, though. Could well be my fault - no thermal paste to the case. But then this amp is hardly ever driven hard. -- *Why isn't there mouse-flavoured cat food? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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