That card was one that was replaced at some time prior to the current troubles... No pun intended.oddioguy wrote:Did you chech the semi's on this card? (The ones mounted to the heatsink.)
Looks like a likely spot that would blow fuses
We haven't gone that far. We were just following with what PDI was telling us, and they had asked for photos to see some of the specifics... if you can believe that. My only concern with swapping cards, would be if it could be blowing more than just fuses... Is this valid, or am I being a scardy cat?oddioguy wrote:Looks like 3 identical cards, one for each leg?
I assume you swapped cards from another leg to see whether the fault moved with the card?
If so, you've narrowed it down to card level, and are back to the aforementioned semis as likely culprits.
oddioguy wrote:That's why I suggested swapping the known bad card with a known good card. If the problem moves with the card, then the card is indeed your problem. All you gamble is a few fuses.
weatherstation audio wrote:Wow... that thing has some huge ass resistors... those big swirly brown things, I assume.
(snip...)
oddioguy wrote:If you want to check your progress, try sticking your tongue across the terminals marked "600V". That'll let you know if you've restored primary power or not...
macrae11 wrote:oddioguy wrote:If you want to check your progress, try sticking your tongue across the terminals marked "600V". That'll let you know if you've restored primary power or not...
Just a disclaimer to anyone who didn't see the sarcastic devil smiley don't try this at home. (just trying to prevent some lawsuits from stupid people. )
macrae11 wrote:Hey I'm for Darwin awards, but I think they should have to do it without being pushed.
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