I have a SWR Silverado on the bench that has a failure mode I have not seen before.
When I opened the amp for repair, I found a metal buckle, like a d-ring from a cheap backpack or purse, had welded itself across the terminals of the IEC jack.
After I removed that and cleaned up the mess surrounding it (IEC jack and power switch were carbon-y), the amp powered up on the lightbulb limiter okay with no load on the speaker jack. If I powered it up connected to my dummy load, I'd get a bright bulb.
Then I noticed that if I first powered it up with no load, which worked okay, then connected a load before the PS caps discharged, it would power up with a load.
I pulled the PS caps and tested them on my power supply, and one was fine but the other one made the needle on the ammeter jerk wildly.
New caps, and now it's back to the same behavior: power it up with no load, dark bulb. Power it up with a load, bright bulb. Power it up with a load before the caps have a chance to discharge, dark bulb.
Ideas?
When I opened the amp for repair, I found a metal buckle, like a d-ring from a cheap backpack or purse, had welded itself across the terminals of the IEC jack.
After I removed that and cleaned up the mess surrounding it (IEC jack and power switch were carbon-y), the amp powered up on the lightbulb limiter okay with no load on the speaker jack. If I powered it up connected to my dummy load, I'd get a bright bulb.
Then I noticed that if I first powered it up with no load, which worked okay, then connected a load before the PS caps discharged, it would power up with a load.
I pulled the PS caps and tested them on my power supply, and one was fine but the other one made the needle on the ammeter jerk wildly.
New caps, and now it's back to the same behavior: power it up with no load, dark bulb. Power it up with a load, bright bulb. Power it up with a load before the caps have a chance to discharge, dark bulb.
Ideas?
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