How to Diagnose and Repair Transistor Circuits - No Schematics. Dynacord Powermate 600

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  • čas přidán 31. 05. 2022
  • This Dynacord Powermate 600W Powered Mixer/Amplifier is stuck in protect mode. It has mainly discrete transitor cuircuits and have I have no schematics that match the version I have. But I still need to fix it. Here is a practical example of how to diagnose a difficult fault using nothing but methodical fault finding, basic electronics knowledge, some intuition and a multimeter!
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Komentáře • 213

  • @tomluque
    @tomluque Před 2 lety +49

    I'm 73yr old and have been doing electronic repairs on medical equipment for 45 years. I helped in improving my knowledge of circuits by watching your techniques and drawing of schematics. Thank you for continuing to post on CZcams.

  • @adambradley3284
    @adambradley3284 Před 5 hodinami

    The ability to work without a schematic is what draws me to your videos. A Technician who can work using basic tools and logic is worth his weight in gold (as long as he's a f@t Bast**d). Thoroughly enjoyed the 2 hours..... I've always liked the analogy of water flow to describe DC through small circuits, and it occurred to me during this video that a bucket of water in a tree in East Yorkshire, +ve potential, has an equal and opposite bucket here in Australia. True Ground is not the dirt under your feet, but the centre of the earth where the water can finally rest= zero gravity, The Bucket in the gum tree is -ve potential with respect to Ground and the bucket up North. Loving the channel. Please keep it long and boring, as there are those of us that find this stuff fascinating,

  • @theforthdoctor7872
    @theforthdoctor7872 Před 2 lety +43

    outstanding, I love that you didn't try to edit it to make yourself look like a Tony Stark style genius.Its all about the journey. utmost respect.

    • @LearnElectronicsRepair
      @LearnElectronicsRepair  Před 2 lety +13

      And ain't that the truth 😁

    • @DadofScience
      @DadofScience Před rokem +2

      Couldn't agree more. I learn more from the finding of dead end and then where to navigate to from there than the final fix. Many thanks, Richard.

  • @pauldery7875
    @pauldery7875 Před 29 dny +1

    Richard, your videos are so awesome and authentic, why do you not have over a million subscribers. Keep up the great videos. Paul, USA

  • @dispdisp3703
    @dispdisp3703 Před rokem +7

    The honesty of your channel is what I like the most. Real technician doing real repairs!

  • @madkiwimuso2477
    @madkiwimuso2477 Před 2 lety +20

    Hi from New Zealand! I found that thoroughly absorbing, especially with the successful conclusion. I am a 'fledgling electronics repair enthusiast, and just want to express my appreciation to you for your tutorials, which are invaluable to myself and, I'm sure, to others like me. Thank you for taking the time to 'educate' us electronics philistines, and please keep up the effort you put into these videos, it is truly appreciated.

    • @jimle22
      @jimle22 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Me also. Thanks for these video tutorials.

  • @Philippians4vs4-8
    @Philippians4vs4-8 Před rokem +6

    You are a wonderful technician. You bring back a lot of memories for me. I am also a troubleshooter but +70 years old now and retired years ago. It is so refreshing to see real troubleshooting nowadays, rather then just shot-gunning component's or just changing modules.

  • @seeithappen1
    @seeithappen1 Před 2 lety +6

    Great example of real deal fault tracing, an unexpected burned path hidden under a bunch of components. They dont teach you this at school. I would not have found it. Thanks for the learning.

  • @marinvidovic763
    @marinvidovic763 Před rokem +1

    OMG ...
    You kept me 2 h + glued to the chair.
    Mystery case !
    If you didn't find minor fault
    ... this thing will End up in a Electronic wast collection BIN
    (* - or in a landfill... ...), ...just due to 2 mm of broken coppar traces.
    👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 !!!

  • @konturgestalter
    @konturgestalter Před 2 lety +8

    just one of the best electronics channels i currently know

  • @repairfreak
    @repairfreak Před rokem +3

    Very well done sir. After about 30 years on/off repair of consumer electronics I’m impressed. I loved how you were able to dissect the circuit down. Your lucky clue was the hot TO92 small signal transistor. But how you determined what actually was happening by your knowledgeable comparison side to side was brilliant. When it all lead to the open hidden trace and then your jumper wire correction I got excited! What a wonderful thing to see that protect light off, and then hear those relays click, it was the sound of success, “like beautiful trumpets to my ears!” The reward of hearing music in the end makes audio repair such a glorious thing. You definitely have one up on me in your knowledge of transistor configurations, and how they interact with each other. I loved how you were able to show us the bias voltages by comparing base to emitters even when dealing with a mix of positive & neg voltages, and how you were able to draw this all out and explain. I always use my flexible fiber light for inspecting pcb traces. However your break was in a most hidden place. Just goes to show how one really need to use all of ones senses, and be careful to be alert to all things/possibilities, as to not waste unnecessary time getting mislead in the wrong direction. You did this all without a schematic, I’m very impressed. I actually suspected shorted output transistors as the fault. Well done!! 😎👍

  • @freeelectron8261
    @freeelectron8261 Před 4 měsíci

    Watched from start to finished. That was a tough one. Great troubleshooting lesson.👍

  • @jimle22
    @jimle22 Před 9 měsíci

    I have to admit I did dose off once bc I was very tired to start with, bit I just went and fixed a cup of coffee, came back rewound the tape anad continued all the way to end. Couldn't stand the mystery. Had to see how you fixed it, So glad I did, it was well worth the learning experience. Thanks Richard for another great repair video.

  • @SomeOtherCrap
    @SomeOtherCrap Před 2 lety +11

    Every time a customer comes in and says "It doesn't work, I think it's probably just a fuse", I'll tell them to watch this, just so they have some idea what we go through!

  • @markhonigschmid6116
    @markhonigschmid6116 Před 3 měsíci

    Thank you for your time and your helpful videos!
    I'm 44 and now I try to learn electronics. I'm from Austria, and so my mother tongue is German.
    Thank you for speaking this nice british-english! So I can improve my english at the same time.
    Thank you for your effort!

  • @wannabemgtow2540
    @wannabemgtow2540 Před 2 lety +1

    One half of it one day and saw the rest the other, and I have to admit that I did fall asleep. I have to go back and review some of the video. Anyhow it was very educational thank you.

  • @nirmanmulalic1824
    @nirmanmulalic1824 Před rokem

    Sir, you’ve got the brain and knowledge. Congratulations!

  • @jonka1
    @jonka1 Před 2 lety +2

    That was a quick couple of hours. Thank you for wanting to do this, I didn't see any wasted time and you got there without a circuit.

  • @surgingcircuits6955
    @surgingcircuits6955 Před 2 lety

    I fell asleep a couple of times ... only to wake back up, rewind to where I remembered, and go forward again. It's a great way to watch a 2'10" video in over 3hrs. Ha! But... it taught me a lot and I am grateful. I also learned tenacity and diligence. Maybe more important. Thx.

  • @leopoldpoppenberger8692
    @leopoldpoppenberger8692 Před 2 lety +3

    when you said an open or break I was thinking a wire connection one of my highlights otherwise you are far ahead of me took electronics 40 years ago thank YOU

    • @LearnElectronicsRepair
      @LearnElectronicsRepair  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah I've been at it a long time too. I took my city & guilds in electronics repair 40 years ago (which was a 12 month full time course) but I'm not university educated I stopped after 6th form,which is apparently grade or year 12-13 in the USA though i had to google that.

  • @theoloutlaw
    @theoloutlaw Před 2 lety +4

    Loved it! My lack of knowledge baffled me about half way through, but glad I can always come back to these videos to review and keep learning :)

  • @CliveBagley
    @CliveBagley Před 2 lety

    Watched the lot - in two sittings- and once again this old dog learned a new trick or two. Cheers!

  • @hullinstruments
    @hullinstruments Před 2 lety +12

    Keep it up because although this may have hit your limit now, you are super smart and very good at adapting to a situation. The more strange things you come across and have experience with… Your knowledge will grow. Remember when we used to be in school in algebra or some other complicated class… Maybe 3 to 6 months of that class and maybe we could solve the problems but we never really understood what was going on. And then one day all of a sudden it “CLICKED”?….. that happens in electronics and will continue to happen. Obviously those instances will get fewer and far in between and spread out over time but no matter how long you stick with it you’ll have those epiphanies from time to time a few times a year… And you’re already so good at this now you will definitely improve. Especially considering the community you’re building here on CZcams of people who can assist and explain things if you have questions.
    I’m a complete idiot, I have my own small and humble business and metrology lab doing component level board repair specializing in test equipment and stuff for other labs. I don’t really have a great ability to adapt or deep understanding like you do. I’ve just marched ahead until I’ve had many of those “click“ instances… and watching content like yours helps me to have even more instances of deeper understanding. Definitely my favorite electronics channel I’ve discovered over the past three or four years. Don’t get me wrong I love Mr. Carlson and a few of the other highly advanced individuals… But sometimes I really don’t understand what they’re talking about, your channel and methods are a lot closer to mine and your teaching style is great. So even though I may already be experienced in some of these areas and know it well… It still sharpens my knowledge every video of yours I watch. Some of which I’ve watched a dozen times and stream in my lab when it’s quiet during the day

    • @LearnElectronicsRepair
      @LearnElectronicsRepair  Před 2 lety +6

      Cheers. I did fix it so all is good, but as I said this one pushed me hard. To the limit possibly. The moment it 'clicked' for me was when I figured out that if the transistor network on one channel was monitoring 65V HT- then the ought to be monitoring 65V HT+ as well, and it was... but on the other side only 65V HT+ was being monitored and it was fairly obvious there was an open circuit track and I basically knew where it must be. If I hadn't found the broken track I would have just connected a wire from that emitter to 65V HT- (using the light bulb for protection) and it would have worked, just not quite such an elegant repair 😉
      Yeah I'm still learning, like you say we all are. A friend said I should make a note in a log book of these faults and the cause, but as I pointed out to him once you fixed one like this you will *never* forget what was causing it 😋

    • @reacey
      @reacey Před 2 lety +2

      Check shango066 , repairs older stuff but hes brilliant . Big clive has probably the deepest understanding of electronics . Iv only just found this channel but this guy is right up there with the best in the business . Much respect

    • @nirmanmulalic1824
      @nirmanmulalic1824 Před rokem

      I will never forget it although I was only watching, let alone you Sir, heavily sweating.

  • @khx73
    @khx73 Před 2 lety +1

    Didn't skip a single second. Excellent work and a satisfying conclusion.

  • @siavasheghlimi6945
    @siavasheghlimi6945 Před rokem

    Respect, sir. Respect... Beautiful video, without edit; very helpful. I learnt a lot. So, please continue, you gorgeous man....
    Cheers
    Siavash (from Iran)

  • @Laterdays2
    @Laterdays2 Před rokem

    17 years like you have never missed a beat. That was amazing. Thanks!!

  • @Colin8721971
    @Colin8721971 Před 2 lety +4

    Just starting out on this type of repair and this is what I have been waiting for! A logical process of measuring with all the pit falls. I am making leaps and bounds in my process of self learning. Great stuff!

  • @markwhitfield5412
    @markwhitfield5412 Před 2 lety +2

    good job, must admit most of it i just didnt understand, ill keep watching. everything lol, u never know it might sink in, MIGHT!

  • @bryandraughn9830
    @bryandraughn9830 Před 7 měsíci

    I've got an old Yamaha guitar amplifier with 2 big transistors on a heat sink in the back. I've changed those but the amp still just makes real spikey fart sounds.
    I got into the power supply and it's working fine so for now, it's furniture.lol!
    There's a lot of funky stuff in there.
    I do have an abundance of brand new spare parts. Long story. Also quite a bit of experience tinkering and building basic circuits.
    I think I need to run a signal through the amp in order to diagnose.
    For the time being, I'll keep watching your videos.

  • @deviantmultimedia9497
    @deviantmultimedia9497 Před rokem +1

    I laughed my ass off at the end "Not including you fell asleep" because admittedly I DID fall asleep and had woken up it was to this ---> 1:37:18 . 🤣 After watching it again, I was actually keen on the subject already and you did quite well explaining it. But you've got to admit, that's pretty damn funny. And then seeing the bright green letters at the end 🤣. Anyway, jokes aside, great video. I really did go back and watch what I missed, knowing something in theory is one thing but in practice is another. This repair would've kicked my ass up and down. I would've had to give it back to the customer unfixed. Being able to watch a master in such a situation, putting the theory into practice and coming out victorious, is a valuable valuable privilege and I'd be doing myself a disservice by not watching it.

    • @garypoplin4599
      @garypoplin4599 Před 12 dny

      2:09:46 - I like your idea of straightening up and paying attention to Richard’s pen and paper monologues; because, admittedly, I skip through his videos looking for these circuitry explanations! I do this particularly on your extra long presentations, Richard, before rewinding to watch from the beginning. I’ve learned _much_ from your “old school” technology over the years since discovering your channel.

  • @gregreynolds5686
    @gregreynolds5686 Před 2 lety

    A great testament to your character that you didn't give up!

  • @johnm4962
    @johnm4962 Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you so much for teaching me. I appreciate all you do. Thank you

  • @gillesparisien4383
    @gillesparisien4383 Před 2 dny

    Thank you from Laval in Montreal Quebec

  • @reacey
    @reacey Před 2 lety +3

    Absolutely love your videos mate learn more from you than i ever did at school, college or anywhere else . Thankyou , from north yorkshire ,UK

  • @Sir.RickParker949
    @Sir.RickParker949 Před 2 lety

    I'm glad I found you, your way of explaining the various components and what their functions are is splendid. I look forward to learning as much as possible from you, since I am disabled with a crushed rt.hand I can no longer do auto repair as a living. This is going to be my new line of work since I've always had a fairly thorough understanding of electricity. Thanks again sir!

  • @Cleofizoid
    @Cleofizoid Před 2 lety

    Disco lives! Good job...it all started with using the IR camera. Not too long, enjoyed it.

  • @cskeet1320
    @cskeet1320 Před rokem +1

    Another fantastic video. I was gripped and watched from start to finish. It was not to long. Your attention to detail and logical clear explanations are great for beginners like me. You don't miss anything out and show warts and all in your journey. I learned so much as with all your videos.
    Thanks v much.

  • @Mcfreddo
    @Mcfreddo Před 17 dny

    Yes, I watched the whole video. Thank you!

  • @darrenbird2526
    @darrenbird2526 Před 5 měsíci

    Hi from Tasmania Australia. I'm learning electronics to do repairs and get my advanced Amateur Licence. I get so much from your channel. I'm learning so much from your channel and I think I learnt more from this diagnosis because it was so long. Absolutely loved it! I can't stop watching. Darren

    • @Mcfreddo
      @Mcfreddo Před 17 dny

      Hi, what do you mean by advanced amateur license?
      Oh, for amateur radio operator?- Talking to other people around the world?

  • @andymouse
    @andymouse Před rokem

    This should be required viewing in colleges and Uni, great piece of diagnostics and fun to follow along...cheers.

  • @marcellipovsky8222
    @marcellipovsky8222 Před 2 lety +1

    I made it to the end AND it was worth it. Once again a minor fault which causes a major problem. Thank you Richard for your time. I am sure that if you weren't shooting this video, you would have it fixed much sooner. (psst, don't tell the client 😁)

  • @stevewebb488
    @stevewebb488 Před měsícem

    Watched it all and learned so much, Excellent video and so well explained, thank you and keep em coming 😊

  • @spiderkhan259
    @spiderkhan259 Před rokem

    Thankyou sir, u make fault finding very intresting may God bless u and grant u long life and good health.

  • @fredb1130
    @fredb1130 Před 2 lety +2

    I love watching your videos. I always learn something. Watched the whole thing, it's out of my league but still enjoyed the whole damn thing. Thank You for sharing your journey with everyone.

  • @ngofyneface5547
    @ngofyneface5547 Před rokem

    Good one. I gained a lot from this. Thanks and may God bless you.

  • @ajra6805
    @ajra6805 Před 2 lety +1

    Very much enjoyed watching this repair. probably like you I'm in awe the trace vaporized where it did And your method of explanation allowed me to visualize the circuit and how it operates

  • @ziggyironic
    @ziggyironic Před 2 lety +1

    Brilliant, thank you for taking the time to make this video and for sharing your knowledge. 👍👍

  • @RickL_was_here
    @RickL_was_here Před rokem

    New subscriber and that decision took about 3 seconds.
    I truly appreciate the way you go through everything and being a somewhat newbie with this stuff, I think I'm going to be learning a lot from you....
    Cheers from Canada!

  • @errolhibbert2390
    @errolhibbert2390 Před 3 měsíci

    Sure learn! a lot about transistors there, loads of experience in troubleshooting, good skills.

  • @absurdengineering
    @absurdengineering Před rokem

    I haven’t watched it to the end yet - but :) When replacing transistors in current sources or current mirrors, treat them like you would differential pairs: replace all the transistors at the same level of the circuit. In a single output current source or current mirror it’ll be two transistors. If there are more current outputs, there’ll be more transistors to replace. You want the replacements to all be from the same batch - matching them may be unnecessary, as that’s expensive to do in mass production. Another point worth making: MPSA42/43 and MPSA92/93 are linear wide-base transistors and are excellent in temperature compensation and mirror/source applications. So they don’t necessarily need to be used in high voltage circuits. I use them for low voltage log/anti log circuits and they are great for that. These transistors also make good temperature compensation diodes. If they work in a low voltage application, don’t replace them with low-voltage types. These transistors are best replaced with identical parts, unless the schematic would indicate otherwise. If they are in a diode connection, definitely don’t substitute them.

  • @ThomasIngolstadt
    @ThomasIngolstadt Před 2 lety +1

    A fantastic travel down the rabbit hole. For me, I don't look for (stereo) audio equipment schematics, as you always have a reference at hand. Usually i do diode mode readings around where I suspect a fault, as this is usually the faster way.
    Anyway, great job! Keep it up!

  • @Puner54
    @Puner54 Před 2 lety

    I Fell Asleep...Truly!

  • @patodonnell2438
    @patodonnell2438 Před rokem

    Great video,I learned a lot about tracing open circuits.

  • @the8bitbarn836
    @the8bitbarn836 Před 2 lety

    Well that was cool! I never really thought about why many Amplifier Manufactures went all IC based Amp chips but now I know why! It seemed that most of the struggle here was finding the offset voltages and the current between the transistors, I found that the one thing helped most was that the other working circuit could be used as a reference in pointing you in right direction. Newer equipment isn't always straight forward in that regard. Glad you got it working. Great video! Some things got lost in English to English translation but all in all you are understandable from my time spent in Telford England. Thanks Again!
    Cheers!

  • @johnbaker26
    @johnbaker26 Před 2 lety +3

    Damn nice job! This is the video that is going to keep me coming back to your channel

  • @christopherholmqvist321

    I'd watched it! Fantstic to be a part of your methods and problem solving. I learned a lot.

  • @Gutterball
    @Gutterball Před měsícem

    I have a difficult time with accents and understand probably 60 per cent of what you are saying, I remind myself you are speaking english. Anyway, you infared tester is of great interest to me as this began the process of fault finding.

  • @elenium115
    @elenium115 Před 2 lety +1

    Each episode is perfect. I learned so much from you.

  • @peterbrooks539
    @peterbrooks539 Před 3 měsíci

    Fascinating and very engaging.

  • @mikeuk1954
    @mikeuk1954 Před rokem

    Fascinating stuff. Watched the whole video. 👍

  • @metusa666
    @metusa666 Před rokem

    Excellent job thanks for the video always new to learn every time i watch

  • @BatGS
    @BatGS Před 2 lety

    Greetings: I was the guy shouting, but not loud. Ur methodology was OK. I was that way when I started vin the early 70s on Audio and Communications. Now I would have saved U N hour or 1.5hrs on the Vid, no telling how much real time. Those circuits typical. Ck around the outputs, if good then the protection. Another thing. I do not warranty outputs ( B it audio or RF) on a 2nd warranty without my verification of everything connected outside. I encourage my testing of such after the 1st repair. Operator error is not my expense.
    . I used 2 get that stuff a lott. Including the cheap junk worse than Dynacorp. I did not bother 2 cross the Mexican outputs. I figure them 2 B married 3055s. They want it fast and cheap. Sometimes I would have told them " U should have purchased good and expensive". Either way, I like these better than the newer junk. That was about the last of tolerable stuff. Not a bad show old chap. It was a refreshing trip down Memory Lane.

  • @mrdali67
    @mrdali67 Před rokem

    This is definetly REAL watts. My band blew one of these last year, and while getting it repaired we borrowed a brand new Mackie Mixer with quite the exact same specks, 2x350w in 8 ohm.. that is, the diff. Is the old Dynachord is a classic Class A/B amp, while the Mackie was a Class D amp. It also weighs a fraction of the Dynachord. And it showed. While using the Mackie we constantly ran at just below clipping, and it only delivered about half the sound volume. Just proved my impression of Class D amp designs. They may be able to somehow get an rms measurement of sometimes in the thousends of watts without weighing anything. It just dont deliver actually soundpreasure what you think the watts indicate. A traditionally Class A/B amp will always prevail. You never should under estimate a 30-40 pound 30 year old well constructed power amp of 200-400 watt stereo amp. They are miles better than most of the cheaper modern Class D amps sold today. These Dynachord Powermixers back from the 90’s was propably the best thing a small band could invest in back then. They werent especially cheap either but they had what you needed integrated in the mixer part and an extremely well build amp. They are well worth it to get repaired should they fail, instead of going out and buy some of the cheap powermixers today, if you still havn’t switched to powered speakers of a good quality.

  • @peterlarkin762
    @peterlarkin762 Před 11 měsíci

    Brilliant! Nice diagnostics.

  • @goodsingers
    @goodsingers Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks so much for a good explanation

  • @errolhibbert2390
    @errolhibbert2390 Před rokem

    That's a good learning experience you have shown me, you are very good at probing circuits. I am always on this repair chanell.

  • @anurasenarathna1703
    @anurasenarathna1703 Před 2 lety

    Brilliant. Thank you for sharing your skills.

  • @ruimvp
    @ruimvp Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for the lesson. What I do first, after the visual inspection, is to test every single semiconductor in circuit before trying to understand the circuit. In this case it would helped finding that bad transistor faster, I think. Of course your good analysis after finding it is the most important. Check for "viewed all video without sleep" :)

    • @LearnElectronicsRepair
      @LearnElectronicsRepair  Před 2 lety +3

      Yes I agree testing every semiconductor first would have worked. It's a useful technique though doesn't make for such an interesting video 😉

  • @frankreiserm.s.8039
    @frankreiserm.s.8039 Před rokem

    I own my own electronics repair shop Frank Reiser Video/Audio Service. You sure know more than me. Great video!

  • @chuckbenedict7235
    @chuckbenedict7235 Před rokem

    I would have used the thermal camera much sooner as that 20-30 watts had to be going somewhere. But that said, the faulty transistor was not the one getting hot (if I remember right). And the burnt track...I would have never found that. That was incredible deduction buoyed with dogged tenacity. I learned a lot. Thanks!

  • @kerrycomm1702
    @kerrycomm1702 Před 8 měsíci

    Thanks Richard good to learn 👍

  • @LearnElectronicsRepair

    If anyone wants the schematic it is here. This is the correct schematic but I didn't realise at the time as the search option in my pdf viewer was not finding 'Q140' and similar search results.
    Thanks to Johnny Bravo aka check12 for his informative posts regarding this mixer/amplifier
    Dynacord Powermate 600 Schematic: www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=106620
    You need to register (free) on badcaps.net forum to download it - but if you are not already a member there it is a very good place to hang out, so highly recommended.

    • @johnnybravo505
      @johnnybravo505 Před 2 lety

      Aha! ... that explains it ... yeah Dynacord/Electrovoice and some others save the schematics in service manuals as images, and of course you can't text search images (also they don't half cram a LOT into one diagram!). Not finding it though made for a MUCH more informative video I think ... :)

  • @henrybartlett1986
    @henrybartlett1986 Před 2 lety +1

    That was a hard one! Well done. I’m just starting so this was great to see, if somewhat challenging.

    • @LearnElectronicsRepair
      @LearnElectronicsRepair  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah this is the way it goes sometimes. If it is any consolation I also found this repair challenging

  • @Silverlion49
    @Silverlion49 Před 2 lety

    You did NOT go down a rabbit hole - you followed the readings and did a process of elimination till something made sense. Comparing one circuit to the other was logical, but the only clue I think you missed was the bad circuit NOT charging the capacitor - if cap was good then it did not have ground - all in all - GREAT JOB THAT WAS A TOUGHIE.

    • @LearnElectronicsRepair
      @LearnElectronicsRepair  Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah probably I should have picked up on that a bit quicker - it was obvious once i had found the fault, but then that is usually the case 😉

  • @registriert2012
    @registriert2012 Před 2 lety +1

    great job, well done 👍

  • @MsKelvin99
    @MsKelvin99 Před 2 lety

    my new favorite channel

  • @waylonj4078
    @waylonj4078 Před 8 měsíci

    I always seem to learn something new from you. Great Video this time. I am actually working on a Power mixer right now myself. It keeps blowing the 3A Breaker on the unit. Everything I check is good. Maybe I have a similar issue? Trouble is, this mixer is my own... and I am just about to throw it in the bin. I have hours and hours into chasing this short and still haven't found it. I even got lucky and was able to download the schematic for it. I'll tell you this, If shipping wasn't so dam expensive, this mixer would be sitting on your bench and I could just sit back and watch and maybe figure out how I have been missing what appears to be a dead short. :) Anyway, always enjoy your videos. Keep up the good work.

  • @aarontyrrell2931
    @aarontyrrell2931 Před rokem

    Nice fix, wish I had that know how to throw in my back pocket!!

  • @fredfabris7187
    @fredfabris7187 Před 2 lety +1

    I’m really enjoying your content. Please keep it up! I love anything audio and switch mode power supply. I don’t know what a GPU is😂, I guessing I’ll learn.

  • @ukaszSkowerski
    @ukaszSkowerski Před 2 lety

    You did it again :) another great video.

  • @fanieventer3529
    @fanieventer3529 Před 2 lety

    Well done!

  • @ExtremeBogom
    @ExtremeBogom Před 2 lety +2

    Yet again a quality video! Yes I did learn more things during this. In fact that whole thing about positive and negative voltages made that 'click' for me finally.
    I enjoy your fault fixing/repair videos as much as the tutorial ones. You're like Sherlock. Richard Holmes xD.

    • @LearnElectronicsRepair
      @LearnElectronicsRepair  Před 2 lety +2

      I'm really happy you got the whole positive and negative voltage thing. That, to me, is one of the most important points of this whole video. And now you 'get' that it is such a big step forward that a lot of people never make. I am sure this understanding will help you a lot in future 😃

  • @wtfojoxojo1918
    @wtfojoxojo1918 Před 2 lety

    Brillante Maestro, exelente clase de electronica gracias.

  • @g8sbs944
    @g8sbs944 Před 2 lety

    wow what a job i watched it all and did learn a few things thanks great video

  • @Lightrunner.
    @Lightrunner. Před 2 lety

    Hi,
    Super repair video, interesting problem👍👍👍.

  • @keymad4
    @keymad4 Před 8 měsíci

    Well done

  • @N0G0MAIL
    @N0G0MAIL Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent!

  • @mj12eben
    @mj12eben Před rokem

    I think it takes longer to demonstrate a thought process and diagnosis as the obvious faults are eliminated. I learnt heaps.

  • @richardw3294
    @richardw3294 Před rokem

    Logical thinking got you to gold.

  • @GeraldMcKee
    @GeraldMcKee Před 2 lety

    Great job

  • @1dandandy1
    @1dandandy1 Před rokem

    At 01:16:30 I would have swapped the right and left transistors to see if the hot followed the swap. I do not think it would have saved any time finding the blown trace but it is my simple minded way of thinking. Awesome video. Thank You. 👍

  • @1dandandy1
    @1dandandy1 Před rokem

    Wow! Blown traces are the toughest. 👍

  • @davekendall9749
    @davekendall9749 Před rokem

    800 likes. yes I did fall asleep for a bit but I still enjoyed it. may be a new career may be in order. I couldn't resist putting heat-shrink on those speaker cables.

  • @electronicsanta8149
    @electronicsanta8149 Před rokem

    I learned quite a bit from this video. Actually!!!! Great job💴㊙️😀

  • @kriswillems5661
    @kriswillems5661 Před 2 lety +1

    Great fix. Not an easy problem.

  • @IyamNadanumber
    @IyamNadanumber Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks!

  • @twobob
    @twobob Před 2 lety

    In the end a ridiculously thorough inspection of every millimeter of the board with a light would have found the issue. Typical. LOL. Now you will always be tempted to make such a gargantuan task on the off chance you don't have to wait a week. Haunting. Great catch. Nice detective work.

    • @twobob
      @twobob Před 2 lety

      I had just been checking out such a constant current source on "TheAudioPhool"'s channel if I recall correctly. He is worth a watch for some approachable basics of circuit design. Complex little beastie that mixer, near identical to oh so many other me-too mixers now, with more, or less, effort made.

    • @LearnElectronicsRepair
      @LearnElectronicsRepair  Před 2 lety +1

      @@twobob Thanks for the info do you have a direct link to a video? That constant current transistor with base-collector shorted is a new one for me and I would like to understand it a bit better myself.

    • @twobob
      @twobob Před 2 lety

      @@LearnElectronicsRepair I was one of his many "current based" ones. However czcams.com/video/y9acZLquYLM/video.html This gentleman describes the effects clearly if slowly, demonstrating how the values become fixed.

    • @twobob
      @twobob Před 2 lety

      @@LearnElectronicsRepair books.google.co.uk/books?id=hB6kDwAAQBAJ&pg=SA1-PA61&lpg=SA1-PA61 another write up

  • @RetroUpgrade
    @RetroUpgrade Před 2 lety +3

    Hi Richard
    hope you are doing fine .
    I see you are still working really hard :D keep it up you will make it far :D as for me i have had a lot to do and have not been able to post videos unfortunately
    the atari clone video is in the works :D

    • @LearnElectronicsRepair
      @LearnElectronicsRepair  Před 2 lety +2

      Hi Carlos, yep running a YT channel takes a very large amount of time that is for sure. I'm looking forward to you posting some more videos.

  • @jeremywilcox
    @jeremywilcox Před rokem

    Not sure it would have found it here, but a 10x eye glass is invaluable. In my old work environment we found a good, close, visual under bright lite found more taults than you would ever expect.

  • @mtoddvan
    @mtoddvan Před rokem

    Lol some shouting, but enjoy the depth of explanations you go through, interesting to watch you progress 😉 through the circuits.