Instructions for replaceing LED'S
These led's can be easily replaced. BUT these are polarity sensative.
Please read this very carefully.
Inside the plastic cap of the led you will see 2 poles, this is 1 of the easier ways to identify the polarity of the led.
This is important because i have seen some mistakes where people have replaced them and put them in the wrong way round.
I will give a description of the correct way to identify the polarity of an led.
1. Inside the plastic cap the SMALLER of the 2 poles indicates the + (Posative) pole. (the much larger pole is the - pole (negative) pole.
2. On some led's you will find that 1 leg is longer than the other, dont use this as a guideline as this can never be verified as a posative identification on the polarity ALWAYS go by the 2 poles inside the plastic cap for CLEAR indentification of polarity.
3. There are many different colors, shapes AND types of led's.
*WARNING* CHECK THE INPUT VOLTAGE BEFORE REPLACING LED.
Get a volt meter and check the rated current being supplied to the led before you replace it, most led's are regulated by a resistor and a capacitor. The standard voltage for a single phase 2 pole led is 3v DC 50Ma to 90Ma (note: Ma = Milliamps so 50ma = 0.05Amps and 90ma = 0.09Amps )
The type of led's in a fostex machine are single phase 2 pole led's rated at +3v DC (ie: they run on 3 volts - any voltage higher than 3 volts DC on a single LED and they could either burn out or EXPLODE).
The other types of led's are multi colored led's which comprises of the following.
1 negative pole, and multiple posative poles (1 for each color)
Example...
A 3 phase LED has 2 posative poles and 1 negative pole. The 2 colors are commonly controlled by a transistor circuit that switches the posative pole input to the other. so 1 color goes out and the other comes on.
On another note. There are led's that can use all 3 poles to combine 2 colors to make a completely different color, for example,
You have an led with the following poles
1 X Negative pole (-0V)
1 X Posative pole (color = Red (+3V)
1 X Posative Pole (Color = Yellow (+3V)
With this above configuration, i can input current to both poles for red and yellow to combine the colors to make an Orange color. Note that i am still using the same 3V input current, although the load is only marginaly higher, i can get away with increasing the voltage to a maximum of +3.5V BUT only when using both posative poles, if i wanted to revert to using just a single pole, i would then decrease the voltage back to +3V so i dont overload the LED when i am only supplying current to 1 pole.
Daisy chain circuit.
In this type of circuit i connect several LED'S in series, first i have to see how many led's i use, so lets say i use 5 led's connected in series.
First i would start with 3V for the first led then add 1 extra 0.5v of current for each additional led i connect.
so 5 leds starting at +3V which would total +5V total at 125ma.
This would light the 5 led's quite happily and wouldn't overload as the current completes a circuit through all leds connected. My personal prefference would be to round down to the nearest even value in volts. So what i would do for 5 led's is round it to 4.5 Volts at 100Ma and i would test it seperately before applying to a circuit board.
On your model 80 the led layout is similar but far more complex than described here.
The led's you seek are the oblong shaped led's rated at +3V DC.
They are easy to desolder and resolder, but for a good clean connection TIN the led poles first, (Ie: Tinning is a method of coating the led poles in solder to create a good clean connection, and also it will give a good strong solder point).
The 3 or 4 uppermost led's are red and the led's bellow are orange,
I have just recently sold
my Fostex Model 80 as i have just replaced it with a Revox Machine.
I have found that it is not really practical to squeeze 8 tracks onto quarter inch tape as bleedthrough becomes a serious problem because the tracks are so close together. The ideal machine for 8 or 16 tracks would be a half inch machine as the tracks are better spaced and give better audio quality and run less risk to bleedthrough. I Have found that recording 2 tracks in only one direction gives astounding audio quality and eliminates bleadthrough completely and i now have 2 machines in this configuration for which i now use for recording my music on.
In the near future i do have a HUGE load of 7 Inch tape reels that are now surpluss to my requirements, so what i would like to do is possibly trade these in or sell them in exchange for 10.5 inch tape reels for my Revox machines.
At Present i have over 140 tape reels and all are boxed in either library cases or cardboard boxes.
I Hope all this information helps and that you manage to successfully repair your machine
My Electronics degree really did pay off as i would be lost without it.
When i was younger i used to make up loads of test circuits with relays and stuff just to see what i could do.
Hope this info helps
Keith