F
frnkfrkl
Member
One more thing: J171, pin 3 to chassis ground, resistance measure, MACHINE OFF, NO POWER = 6.0 MOhm. Powered up = .OL. So something is opening that circuit at power-up.
Don’t strap pin 3 J171 to chassis ground…strap it to the power rail’s 0V reference on pin 2.Grounded J171, pin 3 to chassis ground. No change.
I'm still a bit worried about the crackling sound on power-up (well, the no audio problem is also an issue, of course). It seems to correspond to the flickering VUs. Once the machine has stabilised, the lights are at full brightness and the crackling sound stops. It also seems to correspond to what I assume would be the delay time before the relays are supposed to kick in (or out). There must be some correlation between the crackling and strange VU meter behaviour and the non-tripping relays because, if I'm understanding this correctly, they are on the same rail.
I would actually consider 6MOhm open circuit. That is very high resistance and the fact you have something measurable when the system is powered down is likely only because of some stray path to ground when components are not in their powered state. The bottom line is, after a few seconds, there should be a low resistance path to ground measurable at J171 pin 3. Where I remain confused is the fact you manually grounded pin 3 and there was still no change. But something is not right with the +6V supply, and always always always start with the headwaters…the power supply has to be working right before you do anything else. You could also shotgun the two diodes in the timing circuit (D805 & D806? My copy of the schematic is not very good quality). I know you were talking about doing that earlier and I steered you away, but I’m changing my opinion on that a bit. But first we need to sort out the lamp power rail.One more thing: J171, pin 3 to chassis ground, resistance measure, MACHINE OFF, NO POWER = 6.0 MOhm. Powered up = .OL. So something is opening that circuit at power-up.
…Remember, I am NOT a tech. I'll need to read this a few more times to get it to sink in.
did a sort of Kung-Fu transistor swap as well, that is to say I did not completely remove the board. I managed to get just enough room to solder the new one in place. Fun fact, the old one tested fine when out of the machine so that was a waste of time and effort.
I will need to disassemble the machine completely this time. I will need to buy and learn how to use an oscilloscope. I will need to source obsolete parts (actually, maybe not, diodes, caps and resistors should be available). The real hassle is that the machine needs to be reassembled to test what I've done and, if it didn't work, I need to tear it all apart again. This is above my pay grade but I don't have a choice because there's no tech anywhere near where I am.
Could you recommend an oscilloscope? Total noob with one of those. I will read, disassemble, test what I can and advise at that point.
One more question: When testing the power supply itself, is it necessary that it be connected to the things to which it is supplying power? That would seem physically impossible with all the wiring harnesses