A little Elmers will glue all things back togethrr
and i would love to say it all ended up splendid but it did not, I
dialed back the trimmer to 2 turns clockwise to drop the power and
plugged the unit in and "poof" the very resistors you speak of went up
in smoke.
i havent gottten around to replacing them yet. What i bought were .22
@ 1watt flameproof carbon film
dont know if that is correct or not dont see how the added wattage would
affect anything but i dont see in the spec if i should be usuing non
inductive or some other style instead. I also used standards as far as
the 4 resistors on pcb3.
I purchased NTE's only because that is what my local supplier sells.
Not brand loyalty. Same with the trimmers. I actually would have
preferrd a surface mount cermet (horizontal0.
Bad news - the fix failed. Good news - Power was restored do I know
the mains transformer and some other parts are OK.
So i have read some of your threads regarding the BM 5000 and am
interested in making the sound better.
As it stands I have a second 5000 but this one has problems with the
left channel. When I took possesion of the unit it would power up with
sound for about 10 seconds. So i gave both trimmers a 1/8 turn counter
and the set the idle current down to 5.05 V. Played beautifully for
about 1 day then "poof " the .22 resistors went up in smoke along with a
darlington and a few of the smaller resistors in the area as well -and
r38 -r41 got hot as well.
So for this particular one a "modified" version is certainly of
interest to me.
BTW I repaired a turntable BM3000 (jammed solenoid the had to be
broke out and glued back together the repair method coming from a post
by you. Still works
OR perhaps i could cut the two boards in half and glue the good parts back together !!! wouldnt that be something