I have a Yamaha G-100 410 that was blowing fuses. It is an all solid state 100 watter. When diagnosing I was pointed towards the output board. So I pulled the output transistors out and the fuse held. So I put the output transistors back in, but didnt bolt them down with the mounting screws, and the fuse again held, Then I plugged my guitar in and it played! So I bolted the output transistors down and then the fuse blew. So I pulled the output transistors back out repalced the fuse and then I got a light show! A Few resistors went up in a blaze of glory. Here is the schematic, the toasted resistors are circled. http://s1122.photobucket.com/albums/...series_I2.jpgI I should also mention I noticed that the screws that mount the output transistors had eventually worn thru a couple coppers traces, Two of them being the B+ supply, so right there is probably the original cause of all this, ground being shorted to the B+ at the output transistor. The amp was working fine for 30+ years until the fuse blew the first time. Remember that the resistors caught fire without the Output transistors in. Questions are:
1) What other components are possibly ruined?
2) How do you test the PNP transistors and Output transistors?
3) How does one go about finding direct replacements?
4)This amp is only worth 200bucks in working condition, Should I just cut my losses,since I wasnt thrilled about the amp anyway. (too heavy to lug around, only does clean sound)
1) What other components are possibly ruined?
2) How do you test the PNP transistors and Output transistors?
3) How does one go about finding direct replacements?
4)This amp is only worth 200bucks in working condition, Should I just cut my losses,since I wasnt thrilled about the amp anyway. (too heavy to lug around, only does clean sound)
Comment