Hello all, I'm new to this forum. I've been directed to you good people by Enzo since the last place I posted about this didn't look too kindly on non-isolated gear repair. My pro-education argument about learning how to safely deal with these amps fell on deaf ears.
Here is the schematic:
There are two notable changes in circuit for the unit I'm working on;
There is now a 50va isolation transformer installed. The fuse and power switch are now wired in series with the live line AC and transformer primary (neutral to primary). Secondary connected to ground and rectifier. Chassis is earth grounded.
The drawing doesn't show it, but this amp had a capacitor (0.22uf/600v) installed between circuit ground and chassis (except for the input jacks and one leg of the OT secondary which are direct chassis connections). When I re-capped the power supply I opted to keep this cap in circuit (new cap installed). I hear no difference between this cap in circuit or bypassed. Was this cap a fail-safe against high voltage DC leaking to chassis? Should I pull it or leave it?
Thank you
adam
Here is the schematic:
There are two notable changes in circuit for the unit I'm working on;
There is now a 50va isolation transformer installed. The fuse and power switch are now wired in series with the live line AC and transformer primary (neutral to primary). Secondary connected to ground and rectifier. Chassis is earth grounded.
The drawing doesn't show it, but this amp had a capacitor (0.22uf/600v) installed between circuit ground and chassis (except for the input jacks and one leg of the OT secondary which are direct chassis connections). When I re-capped the power supply I opted to keep this cap in circuit (new cap installed). I hear no difference between this cap in circuit or bypassed. Was this cap a fail-safe against high voltage DC leaking to chassis? Should I pull it or leave it?
Thank you
adam
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