Hi All,
A guy had a broken Marantz SR18 for sale for a while, dropped the price then gave it away. I was lucky (maybe?) to be first in line. I picked it up, and started browsing for schematics and was discouraged to find that even this old unit, its hard to find detailed specific schematics. And Marantz is nasty and mean when you ask for repair info even on 20+ year old equipment. Ah, well.
Plugged it in, and it boots up. Relays click on, it goes through some self check, turns the relays off, then displays an error message code on the front panel. I found some version of a troubleshooting manual that doesn't have this specific error code, unfortunately.
I dug around a little, found a few repair videos, real pro's fixing these, but didn't find anything specific to this error message. I think they don't like to give away trade secrets, understood!
what I was able to get from the few posts on this monster, is that the power supply board has lots of problems. There are a whole bunch of regulators on that board, and the repairs people talked about, they seem to replace parts on that board quite often. Its got a big pile of circuit boards, and the power supply board is way down on the bottom. Real bear to get disconnected without breaking those tiny plastic clips, and when i got it apart, all the cables were removed, so I could not measure anything.
General question: how the heck do you measure outputs on regulator boards way down in the bottom of a stack of like 6 huge boards, if you have to take the whole thing apart to get at the board? I can't see people taking it all apart, hooking up probes, putting it back together, doing a measurement, then taking it back apart to remove the probes. It seems like you have to somehow take it apart, but leave all the connectors connected, and tilt the upper boards "up" to be able to get probes on that bottom board. Or maybe, only leave the power supply board hooked up fully, but remove the other boards, and probe the ps board with just its inputs connected? (But then, nothing would have a load on it, so ... is that good?)
THanks
Mike
Happy New year
A guy had a broken Marantz SR18 for sale for a while, dropped the price then gave it away. I was lucky (maybe?) to be first in line. I picked it up, and started browsing for schematics and was discouraged to find that even this old unit, its hard to find detailed specific schematics. And Marantz is nasty and mean when you ask for repair info even on 20+ year old equipment. Ah, well.
Plugged it in, and it boots up. Relays click on, it goes through some self check, turns the relays off, then displays an error message code on the front panel. I found some version of a troubleshooting manual that doesn't have this specific error code, unfortunately.
I dug around a little, found a few repair videos, real pro's fixing these, but didn't find anything specific to this error message. I think they don't like to give away trade secrets, understood!
what I was able to get from the few posts on this monster, is that the power supply board has lots of problems. There are a whole bunch of regulators on that board, and the repairs people talked about, they seem to replace parts on that board quite often. Its got a big pile of circuit boards, and the power supply board is way down on the bottom. Real bear to get disconnected without breaking those tiny plastic clips, and when i got it apart, all the cables were removed, so I could not measure anything.
General question: how the heck do you measure outputs on regulator boards way down in the bottom of a stack of like 6 huge boards, if you have to take the whole thing apart to get at the board? I can't see people taking it all apart, hooking up probes, putting it back together, doing a measurement, then taking it back apart to remove the probes. It seems like you have to somehow take it apart, but leave all the connectors connected, and tilt the upper boards "up" to be able to get probes on that bottom board. Or maybe, only leave the power supply board hooked up fully, but remove the other boards, and probe the ps board with just its inputs connected? (But then, nothing would have a load on it, so ... is that good?)
THanks
Mike
Happy New year
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