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#121
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I'm back my new friends. Picking up where I left off. I have sound now but I've lost the HV. Crap! Not sure what I did in rearranging some wiring on the electrolytic caps but there's no HV. I guess I'll have to start by opening the cage once more and check the flyback for continuity then go from there. The HV circuit is the simplest and first area the power hits so I'm not sure how what I did to get audio caused this. Pin 8 on the damper and socket 10 on the CRT feed are supposed to be about 340V DC and I'm getting about 100V less than that.
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#122
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Chris, a suggestion. Er, more like a recommendation.
When calling out 'pins', put in parentheses which element a pin goes to. Like, cathode, plate, G1, G2, filament. It'd be a huge help to the reader. For instance, pin 8 of the 5V4 damper is cathode. Pin 10 on the CRT is Grid 2 (or just G2). Actually, I prefer calling out the element first, with the pin number (in parentheses of course) left optional. |
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#123
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Will do...actually, I have both HV and sound now but, again, no picture. Oy veh! I tried playing again with the ion trap but to no avail. Maybe I should walk from this one for now???
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#124
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How do you know that there is HV?
Once you have something like the ion trap adjusted it isn't useful to go back and mess with it without a logical reason. If the HV is OK and the set had raster before then something like the voltages on the CRT socket have changed. Check them. |
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#125
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| Audiokarma |
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#126
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You might want to download a book here. "How to Troubleshoot a TV Receiver" by Johnson. It is too big for me to make into an attachment.
https://worldradiohistory.com/BOOKSH...helf_RIder.htm Look about half way down the page and on the right for a book with a blue cover. It has some good pictures and explanations of problems. It probably doesn't help that much at the moment but it may in the future. Published in 1953, so for a much later set it may not be accurate. |
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#127
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#128
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#129
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So here is a question that puts my inexperience on full display. The electrolytic caps C131, C132, C116, C127 and C128 are not grounded to the chassis. When I have substituted for them, I've just tied all of the negative leads of the new caps to one another on a terminal strip. For example, the original C131 has a 30uf and a 10uf cap. I disconnected the leads to C131, put in a terminal strip, tied the negative leads of replacement 47 and 10uf caps together and re-soldered the chassis wiring back to the new caps. I didn't pay attention to replicating the negative lead specificity from the connections to the old cap because placing a meter lead on any of the 4 negative leads exiting the bottom of the original gave me the same capacitance reading on the 30uf and 10uf caps in the original. Would this be the correct thing to do, just tying the replacement capacitor negative leads and soldering the chassis leads that had in the original configuration gone to 2 negative leads on C131 to the single new tied negative? I'm not sure if my connections to the negative leads of the new electrolytic caps is causing new problems. TIA for any assistance.
Chris |
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#130
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Last edited by Kevin Kuehn; 07-21-2022 at 08:53 AM. |
| Audiokarma |
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#131
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What Kevin and I was afraid of at first was that you were referring to was connecting the negatives of all the different original caps together where they should be separate. That would be bad. |
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#132
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Last edited by Kevin Kuehn; 07-21-2022 at 09:11 AM. |
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#133
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Yes thank you both...you understood my very meandering description!
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#134
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#135
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| Audiokarma |
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