I received a 5 year old Crown CTS4200.
"shoots sparks"
SMPS took a dump.
IGBT's are blown.
Controller IC is toast along with the SMT transistors that it drives.
No biggy, right?
Hah!
The controller IC is on a standup board.
Cool! The parts that are going to fry are on one board.
Swap it out, replace the IGBT's, fix the secondary + - 15 volt power supply ( filter caps popped).
Wrong!
The little standup board has no part number. It is NOT available.
The one that is in the amp got a "little" hot & fried the traces.
Call Crown back, "Oh, you have to replace the main board"
$564.12
A $150 repair just escalated to $700.00.
Crown uses the snap-off method of circuit board manufacture.
All the ancillary boards snap off at assembly.
So if they rob a standup board for a repair they are left with an unusable assembly.
How hard could it be to outsource the standup board?
Or reprogram the pick & place robot to only stuff that little board.
"shoots sparks"
SMPS took a dump.
IGBT's are blown.
Controller IC is toast along with the SMT transistors that it drives.
No biggy, right?
Hah!
The controller IC is on a standup board.
Cool! The parts that are going to fry are on one board.
Swap it out, replace the IGBT's, fix the secondary + - 15 volt power supply ( filter caps popped).
Wrong!
The little standup board has no part number. It is NOT available.
The one that is in the amp got a "little" hot & fried the traces.
Call Crown back, "Oh, you have to replace the main board"
$564.12
A $150 repair just escalated to $700.00.
Crown uses the snap-off method of circuit board manufacture.
All the ancillary boards snap off at assembly.
So if they rob a standup board for a repair they are left with an unusable assembly.
How hard could it be to outsource the standup board?
Or reprogram the pick & place robot to only stuff that little board.
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