I was given two more ATI Paragon PPS1 Power Supplies that run the beautifully built Live Sound Mix Consoles, from the mid-1980’s thru late 1990’s. One of them I had re-capped before, after repairing the failed 35A 200V Diode Bridge Rectifiers. It had the same diode bridge failure after a couple years of service, so that was an easy fix.
This other turns out to have a faulty +20V Supply Regulator, one that I’ve never serviced. It had a shorted Pass Xstr…TIP35B part, one of six. Now obsolete parts, but I was able to track down 10 pcs each of TIP35C and TIP36C NPN’s and PNP’s, found only one shorted, replaced that. I also found R96 470 ohm 1/4W resistor from the Drive terminal of the Error Amp had burn mark on it, and replaced it with a 470 ohm 1/2W.
With the other five Pass Xstrs unsoldered and completely isolated from the foil pattern, I was able to run it up on the variac/power analyzer, monitoring the output voltage, but found it NOT regulating. Watching the -20V regulator along with this +20V regulator, it’s DRIVE terminal of the Error Amp runs 3 junctions higher than the output buss, then stops at the regulation threshold and the output of it is NOT regulating as I run the AC mains on up. To my surprise, the DRIVE terminal of the +20V regulator drops to 0V at the threshold of Regulation, and NEVER holds the drive circuitry steady. The +20V supply output continues to climb as I turn the Variac up towards 120VAC. -20V supply works fine.
I just checked the new Pass Xstr, and found, after de-soldering it, I had installed a TIP36C PNP….NOT a TIP35C NPN that I thought I had done. So much for my eyesight. I spent a bloody week believing there’s a regulator problem, and after swapping parts with a 3.3V Error amp that had the same dual matched NPN’s and PNP’s, along with replacing the Error amp Q1 & Drive Xstr Q35, swapping out 2N5550 and 2N5401 with MPSA06 & MPSA56 in the Error amp to no avail (and restoring them),
I took photos this morning, and during writing up this thread, I decided to unsolder and replace the new Pass Xstr I replace a week ago. Wrong part! The pitfalls of working alone, and being overly confident in what I had done so carefully, but misreading the small faint silkscreen on the new parts. Now checking it under load.
Everything is working as expected, and as it should have done a week ago! Now, I gotta account for this blunder in my billing! GRRRR!
I also found I had mislabeled the Dual NPN Matched Transistor pair, which should be 2SC3086, NOT 2SC3088. Too bad those two are now obsolete parts!
This other turns out to have a faulty +20V Supply Regulator, one that I’ve never serviced. It had a shorted Pass Xstr…TIP35B part, one of six. Now obsolete parts, but I was able to track down 10 pcs each of TIP35C and TIP36C NPN’s and PNP’s, found only one shorted, replaced that. I also found R96 470 ohm 1/4W resistor from the Drive terminal of the Error Amp had burn mark on it, and replaced it with a 470 ohm 1/2W.
With the other five Pass Xstrs unsoldered and completely isolated from the foil pattern, I was able to run it up on the variac/power analyzer, monitoring the output voltage, but found it NOT regulating. Watching the -20V regulator along with this +20V regulator, it’s DRIVE terminal of the Error Amp runs 3 junctions higher than the output buss, then stops at the regulation threshold and the output of it is NOT regulating as I run the AC mains on up. To my surprise, the DRIVE terminal of the +20V regulator drops to 0V at the threshold of Regulation, and NEVER holds the drive circuitry steady. The +20V supply output continues to climb as I turn the Variac up towards 120VAC. -20V supply works fine.
I just checked the new Pass Xstr, and found, after de-soldering it, I had installed a TIP36C PNP….NOT a TIP35C NPN that I thought I had done. So much for my eyesight. I spent a bloody week believing there’s a regulator problem, and after swapping parts with a 3.3V Error amp that had the same dual matched NPN’s and PNP’s, along with replacing the Error amp Q1 & Drive Xstr Q35, swapping out 2N5550 and 2N5401 with MPSA06 & MPSA56 in the Error amp to no avail (and restoring them),
I took photos this morning, and during writing up this thread, I decided to unsolder and replace the new Pass Xstr I replace a week ago. Wrong part! The pitfalls of working alone, and being overly confident in what I had done so carefully, but misreading the small faint silkscreen on the new parts. Now checking it under load.
Everything is working as expected, and as it should have done a week ago! Now, I gotta account for this blunder in my billing! GRRRR!
I also found I had mislabeled the Dual NPN Matched Transistor pair, which should be 2SC3086, NOT 2SC3088. Too bad those two are now obsolete parts!
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