Wepaintemwild
New Member
Sorry, I'm not all that familiar with testing stuff like this. I set to 200k and both fuses climbed to like 188 and then screen goes back to 1I should have been more clear. Set it to 200 on the ohms scale.
Sorry, I'm not all that familiar with testing stuff like this. I set to 200k and both fuses climbed to like 188 and then screen goes back to 1I should have been more clear. Set it to 200 on the ohms scale.
See attached... look at arrow.
I checked them...all are reading between 28-29OK, so both fuses are blown. Next check the output transistors. See pic. If unsure what to do, call me...
I checked them...all are reading between 28-29OK, so both fuses are blown. Next check the output transistors. See pic. If unsure what to do, call me...
OK, they are probably all good. If you touch your meter leads together does it go to zero? Let me know what this reading is please...
.3What does your meter read when holding the red and black test leads together? The fact that all the transistors read the same is good.
Ok, can't thank you enough for your help. Should I be concerned about that outside capacitor in the corner of the board..it did not react to the meterIt looks like the transistors are OK. You need to replace the fuses. Do you have someone who can do this? If not, that is a service I offer. Contact me through email about that. My suggestion at this point would be to repair the board and put in 2 new heads. There is no real way to test the heads, which likely caused the fuses to blow. Were the second set of heads you put in known good heads?
No, as capacitors can give funny readings, based on which meter leads touch which side of the capacitor. You really need a special capacitor tester to check capacitors. The primary thing is all your transistors are reading the same. When they go out, they usually short out, and this would have shown up in the readings you took. Let me know if you need me to repair the board for you...
I could probably get done by a close friend, but would feel more comfortable letting you do it. If you want to email me your info, I will get it ready.No, as capacitors can give funny readings, based on which meter leads touch which side of the capacitor. You really need a special capacitor tester to check capacitors. The primary thing is all your transistors are reading the same. When they go out, they usually short out, and this would have shown up in the readings you took. Let me know if you need me to repair the board for you...