Hi Everyone, I'm new to this site and have just spent the past day or so reading many interesting posts in the Workbench forum. Looks like there are lots of passionate and talented members here :-)
The Beomaster 8000 was given to me for free, but
dead. I decided to take on the challenge of saving it because I became enamored with the design and the fact that it represented the pinnacle of B&O receiver engineering in its day.
I started
with the power supply, and then proceeded through the various
circuit boards such as preamp, tone control, power amp, etc.
So far, I've replaced a handful of discrete semiconductors and two
linear voltage regulators. I'm not sure what caused the system to
die in the first place, but I'm finding blown components all over
the place (and also one blown ground trace on the FM interface
board)
After
replacing a few semis, I was still unable to get the unit to power
up out of standby mode. It was then when I discovered that there
were two "chassis ground" points in the unit that were not
electrically connected to each other ....after running a ground
wire between the two, the DC offset on the speaker output
disappeared, which cleared the fault signal that the power amp was
sending to the power supply board, thereby allowing the unit to
power up normally. (Still haven't figured out what the"proper"
electrical connection between these two ground points should be.)
Now that
the unit powered up, I was able to start testing the signal path.
Input switching on the preamp board seemed to work, but only one
channel had a signal at the speaker output and even so, the
electronic volume control would not attenuate the signal all the
way down to zero. It turned out that two digital volume attenuators
were bad - they were Analog Devices AD7110's. Unfortunately I wasn't able to find any replacements, so I
simulated them by building a daughter board with an AD7111, a
microcontroller and a 4 channel CMOS analog switch - a project that took some time to complete:
Having overcome the volume control problem, everything seems to be working except the tuner. As I mentioned above, there's a blown ground trace on the FM interface board. After repairing this trace and applying power, I get erratic tuning needle movement and the stereo decoder chip gets slightly warm to the touch. In light of the blown trace, I'm suspicious that the tuner section will need lots of replacement parts. I've already placed an order for the three ICs on the FM board, but otherwise, I'm not sure where to start because I'm not familiar with RF circuitry.
Does anyone have any thoughts or suggestions?
Sincerely,
Ian