On the power pcb, page 13 I think, is a feedthrough cap at the DC voltage in. It was bad, along with a diode. It was shorting the power to ground.
The part number on the schematic shows a through hole cap. It's a surface mount on the pcb. I couldn't find the exact part so I tried;
https://www.digikey.com/product-deta...8-1-ND/3846175
I put it in, I have the 12vdc on the jack side of the cap but the other side I have .1 or .2 vdc. There is 0 resistance from the same 2 ends. None of the 3 conductors show a short to ground.
Before I put it in, I put a jumper between the two ends of the cap so 12vdc would get to D313 and it worked.
So, if the feedthrough shows 0 ohms end to end, the same as a jumper, why no DC at D313?
Is it the wrong cap value? .022 instead of .01? I didn't think that should matter for the DC to pass through.
Thanks
The part number on the schematic shows a through hole cap. It's a surface mount on the pcb. I couldn't find the exact part so I tried;
https://www.digikey.com/product-deta...8-1-ND/3846175
I put it in, I have the 12vdc on the jack side of the cap but the other side I have .1 or .2 vdc. There is 0 resistance from the same 2 ends. None of the 3 conductors show a short to ground.
Before I put it in, I put a jumper between the two ends of the cap so 12vdc would get to D313 and it worked.
So, if the feedthrough shows 0 ohms end to end, the same as a jumper, why no DC at D313?
Is it the wrong cap value? .022 instead of .01? I didn't think that should matter for the DC to pass through.
Thanks
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