A customer brought in a '76 SVT with a blown PT. This thing was still smoking hot and stinky when it got to me two hours after it's death.
I tracked down the problem to a KT-88 that had a dead short between it's screen and cathode. I suppose the PT cooked and cooked until
it shorted internally and took out the fuse? The fuse was a 10A per the schematic.
I do understand that this fuse is not there to stop what happened, but is there for fire prevention etc, but how would one go about fusing the HT secondaries to protect against this sort of thing? How would you determine the fuse ampacity?
Another thing I wonder- did the 22 ohm screen resistor and the diode help or exacerbate this failure?
SVT SCHEMATIC.pdf
I tracked down the problem to a KT-88 that had a dead short between it's screen and cathode. I suppose the PT cooked and cooked until
it shorted internally and took out the fuse? The fuse was a 10A per the schematic.
I do understand that this fuse is not there to stop what happened, but is there for fire prevention etc, but how would one go about fusing the HT secondaries to protect against this sort of thing? How would you determine the fuse ampacity?
Another thing I wonder- did the 22 ohm screen resistor and the diode help or exacerbate this failure?
SVT SCHEMATIC.pdf
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