I recently bought a Digitech RP1000 guitar processor on ebay for what I thought was a bargain price! Yepp! I know, I should know better but to be fair, I had no problems with it until I was gigging with it outside in the sun and the power supply was noisy! By noisy! (I do live in Spain) I mean I suspect the three phase power supply into the building was unbalanced, the gig was a restaurant and they had electric chip friers and every time they turned them on, It was causing uneven harmonics which produced a rather unpleasent loud hum which could be heard on the P.A. system! Getting back to my problem! The RP1000 cut out intermittantly and re-booted which was very annoying and I put it down to just the crappy power supply at the gig, however I had the same problems while rehearsing with no power supply issues, so I sent Digitech an email to ask if there were any problems with this unit which of course they denied!
As the unit is out of warranty I decided to investigate, I pulled the unit apart took shorting precautions and turned the unit on via it's 9Volt AC adaptor which I also checked for output voltage, which was reading a healthy 8.9Volts on load.
As I suspected problems with the AC to DC power supply section I checked to see if the four S1g diodes in bridge-form were causing any problems! I checked their temperature and they were cooking at well over 60 deg C. As I needed the unit that night for a gig I decided to make a U shaped heatsink from a small piece of aluminium which sat on top of the diodes and the chassis and applied heatsink compound on the tops of the diodes and the chassis put it back together and crossed my fingers! It worked!! I have had no problems since but of course I am not happy with this solution so decided to change the 1 Amp S1g's diodes for 3 Amp S3G's diodes and have ordered them to fit very soon even though I know they are slightly larger! I also supspected faulty capacitors aswell but have no way to test them.
I did send Digitech an email to tell them of my findings and they just said change the diodes!? To what? S1g's or S3g's?????
Another email later they were kind enough to send me a pdf schematic of the power which considering the RP1000 is still in production, I think is a real achievement!
RP1000 Power Supply.pdf
Sorry to bore the pants of you guy's but any help would be great!
As the unit is out of warranty I decided to investigate, I pulled the unit apart took shorting precautions and turned the unit on via it's 9Volt AC adaptor which I also checked for output voltage, which was reading a healthy 8.9Volts on load.
As I suspected problems with the AC to DC power supply section I checked to see if the four S1g diodes in bridge-form were causing any problems! I checked their temperature and they were cooking at well over 60 deg C. As I needed the unit that night for a gig I decided to make a U shaped heatsink from a small piece of aluminium which sat on top of the diodes and the chassis and applied heatsink compound on the tops of the diodes and the chassis put it back together and crossed my fingers! It worked!! I have had no problems since but of course I am not happy with this solution so decided to change the 1 Amp S1g's diodes for 3 Amp S3G's diodes and have ordered them to fit very soon even though I know they are slightly larger! I also supspected faulty capacitors aswell but have no way to test them.
I did send Digitech an email to tell them of my findings and they just said change the diodes!? To what? S1g's or S3g's?????
Another email later they were kind enough to send me a pdf schematic of the power which considering the RP1000 is still in production, I think is a real achievement!
RP1000 Power Supply.pdf
Sorry to bore the pants of you guy's but any help would be great!
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