No, I don't.
Just remember the relay normally waits a few seconds then clicks on to enable the speakers if it detects no problems.
I am used to following transistor logic, I learned relay logic a long time ago, and it is similar. The E-C acts like a switch, it is either shorted together or open. Pull the base voltage towards teh collector voltage and the thing turns on - the e-c path conducts. It is a little relay, it is a little switch, for all intents.
If you jumper across a power switch in an amp, it does not hurt the switch. After all the wire is a path for current AROUND the switch.
Q207 drives the relay coil. The right end of the coil is at +40v. When Q207 is on, the left end of the coil is connected through R212 to ground. Current flows, and the coil energizes, which pulls in the relay. (pulls in means the contacts close. the coil pulls the armature down to do this.) SO we could just short from E to C with a probe tip or something and the relay should pull in.
R211 holds the base of Q207 down - keeps the xstr off. Q205 has the job of turning Q207 on. Q205 collector is at +40, and the emotter connects to the base of Q207 - through a resistor. If something turns Q205 on - E to C flows - and thus the +40 finds its way to the base of Q207. Actually the current finds its way there, there will not be +40 at that base. So you could short E-C on Q205 and the relay should pull in.
I mentioned this already I think, but in case you are not sure what the relay is doing...
One end of the relay is at +40. If the relay is not energized, then that +40 will be at the other end of the coil as well. No current through the coil resistance means no voltage DROP. As soon as Q207 tirns on, the left end of that coil goes down to a low voltage. Now current flows through the coil resistance, and most of that 40v is across the coil. Can't get at the coil terminals? the diode is across the coil. Any voltage across the coil will be across the diode. Meter probes across the diode. If zero volts - and the diode is not shorted - the the relay is off. If you get 25-30 volts or something, then the relay is on.
Now some reverse logic. If we ignore the rest of the Q2xx xstrs, then we see R205 up there trying to pull the base of Q205 up to +40 - pulls the base towards the collector. SO absent those other parts, that resistor turns on Q205, which turns on Q207, which pulls in the relay. If we ground the base of Q205, it turns off Q205, and ...the relay drops out. 220uf C202 sits at the base of Q205 to ground. When you first apply power, that cap has to charge up through the 56k R205 before the base of Q205 can get to a high enough voltage to turn on. Thus C202 is the timing cap for that period of delay at power up. Remove that cap and ther eis no delay - instant on. Reduce the value of the cap and the delay is shorter. Or make the thing 1000uf and teh delay will be four times longer. Whatever, that is how it works.
Now the other four xstrs. They all connect more or less to the base of Q205, and to ground. Turn them on adn they short the base of Q205 to ground and turn it off. That drops the relay out. So all those xstrs serve to kill the speakers when trouble erupts.
The two channel outs are sampled through R201,202 and fed to the base of Q202. Positive peaks there could turn it on, and since it is connected to the base of Q205, when it turns on, Q205 wil be turned off. Note Q203 is opposite polarity but otherwise parallel with Q202. The same outputsample that went to base Q202 also goes to Q204. All that does is serve to invert things so negatove peaks will also turn off Q205. Trust me.
Q206? If it turns on, it also grounds the base of Q205...relay drops out. Normally a special little negative supply off C517 keeps the base of Q206 low. In the absence of that voltage, a couple resistors to +40 will pull that base up and Q206 will turn off Q205. If Q201 way up there turns on, that would bring +40 to the base of Q206, turning it on...relay drops out. Without getting into it, the base of Q201 is fed by lines direct from the limiter circuits of the channels. if teh channels go into limit, it drops out the relay.
I will post this and refer to your readings separately.
Just remember the relay normally waits a few seconds then clicks on to enable the speakers if it detects no problems.
I am used to following transistor logic, I learned relay logic a long time ago, and it is similar. The E-C acts like a switch, it is either shorted together or open. Pull the base voltage towards teh collector voltage and the thing turns on - the e-c path conducts. It is a little relay, it is a little switch, for all intents.
If you jumper across a power switch in an amp, it does not hurt the switch. After all the wire is a path for current AROUND the switch.
Q207 drives the relay coil. The right end of the coil is at +40v. When Q207 is on, the left end of the coil is connected through R212 to ground. Current flows, and the coil energizes, which pulls in the relay. (pulls in means the contacts close. the coil pulls the armature down to do this.) SO we could just short from E to C with a probe tip or something and the relay should pull in.
R211 holds the base of Q207 down - keeps the xstr off. Q205 has the job of turning Q207 on. Q205 collector is at +40, and the emotter connects to the base of Q207 - through a resistor. If something turns Q205 on - E to C flows - and thus the +40 finds its way to the base of Q207. Actually the current finds its way there, there will not be +40 at that base. So you could short E-C on Q205 and the relay should pull in.
I mentioned this already I think, but in case you are not sure what the relay is doing...
One end of the relay is at +40. If the relay is not energized, then that +40 will be at the other end of the coil as well. No current through the coil resistance means no voltage DROP. As soon as Q207 tirns on, the left end of that coil goes down to a low voltage. Now current flows through the coil resistance, and most of that 40v is across the coil. Can't get at the coil terminals? the diode is across the coil. Any voltage across the coil will be across the diode. Meter probes across the diode. If zero volts - and the diode is not shorted - the the relay is off. If you get 25-30 volts or something, then the relay is on.
Now some reverse logic. If we ignore the rest of the Q2xx xstrs, then we see R205 up there trying to pull the base of Q205 up to +40 - pulls the base towards the collector. SO absent those other parts, that resistor turns on Q205, which turns on Q207, which pulls in the relay. If we ground the base of Q205, it turns off Q205, and ...the relay drops out. 220uf C202 sits at the base of Q205 to ground. When you first apply power, that cap has to charge up through the 56k R205 before the base of Q205 can get to a high enough voltage to turn on. Thus C202 is the timing cap for that period of delay at power up. Remove that cap and ther eis no delay - instant on. Reduce the value of the cap and the delay is shorter. Or make the thing 1000uf and teh delay will be four times longer. Whatever, that is how it works.
Now the other four xstrs. They all connect more or less to the base of Q205, and to ground. Turn them on adn they short the base of Q205 to ground and turn it off. That drops the relay out. So all those xstrs serve to kill the speakers when trouble erupts.
The two channel outs are sampled through R201,202 and fed to the base of Q202. Positive peaks there could turn it on, and since it is connected to the base of Q205, when it turns on, Q205 wil be turned off. Note Q203 is opposite polarity but otherwise parallel with Q202. The same outputsample that went to base Q202 also goes to Q204. All that does is serve to invert things so negatove peaks will also turn off Q205. Trust me.
Q206? If it turns on, it also grounds the base of Q205...relay drops out. Normally a special little negative supply off C517 keeps the base of Q206 low. In the absence of that voltage, a couple resistors to +40 will pull that base up and Q206 will turn off Q205. If Q201 way up there turns on, that would bring +40 to the base of Q206, turning it on...relay drops out. Without getting into it, the base of Q201 is fed by lines direct from the limiter circuits of the channels. if teh channels go into limit, it drops out the relay.
I will post this and refer to your readings separately.
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