Hi all. I have been reading the posts by Enzo and Tekhed7 and Gtr_tech about another members Special 130... and I have one with a similar problem...
I bought this from a friend about 12 years ago. He said it was "blown." The speaker cone was frozen so I took it apart and saw it was half burned, indicating high DC in the output (right?). I had it reconed. I then, simplistically, assumed bad output transistors and replaced them with 70483100 (with a circled "on" logo) transistors that I was told at the time were a good replacement. I powered it up and got a crackle through the speaker and the fuse blows after about one second. Sooooo, I got mad and let it sit for 12 years.
After finding you all, I drug it out, took it apart, cleaned it up, checked all my solder joints, visually checked all the electrolytics, looked for burned components, replaced the fuse, and fired it up... same thing.
Any Ideas? i am a carpenter that is also a very capable tech...I have two years in the Army fixing radios and a CC degree in electronics. I just don't do this often and don't have the time to re-learn everything.
I know one of you guys could probably say, " check r67 for a short" or "probably c32 is leaky" or some such thing that would save me weeks (if not another 12 years!) of head-scratching.
Thanks in advance!
Steve
Any help would be VERY appreciated.
I bought this from a friend about 12 years ago. He said it was "blown." The speaker cone was frozen so I took it apart and saw it was half burned, indicating high DC in the output (right?). I had it reconed. I then, simplistically, assumed bad output transistors and replaced them with 70483100 (with a circled "on" logo) transistors that I was told at the time were a good replacement. I powered it up and got a crackle through the speaker and the fuse blows after about one second. Sooooo, I got mad and let it sit for 12 years.
After finding you all, I drug it out, took it apart, cleaned it up, checked all my solder joints, visually checked all the electrolytics, looked for burned components, replaced the fuse, and fired it up... same thing.
Any Ideas? i am a carpenter that is also a very capable tech...I have two years in the Army fixing radios and a CC degree in electronics. I just don't do this often and don't have the time to re-learn everything.
I know one of you guys could probably say, " check r67 for a short" or "probably c32 is leaky" or some such thing that would save me weeks (if not another 12 years!) of head-scratching.
Thanks in advance!
Steve
Any help would be VERY appreciated.
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