S
sck0006
Guest
I have a Kenwood VR-407 that keeps going into protection (turns off &
power light blinks). The owner stated that it was a sudden
occurrence, no lightning strikes, shorted wires, etc... This unit uses
two amplifier modules, one STK413-020A for front & center channels,
and a STK412-020A for the surrounds. I removed both modules, the unit
powered up no protection. I put in the front module, the unit powered
up no protection. I removed the front & put in the rear, the unit
went into protection. I assumed the rear module was blown, purchased
the new one for ~$30.00, put it in, & the unit still goes into
protection. I don't have the service manual on this unit, but from
what I can tell, each module uses the same four power supplies. It
looks like there's a ą65V & a ą35V. Both supplies come up w/ no
ripple before the unit goes into protection. I wasn't able to get any
sort of quantitative measurements from the output terminals (at the
amplifier outputs, of course the rear panel terminals are cut off
because of the speaker relays), but I can safely say that none of the
output terminals are shorted to any supply or ground. I checked all
thru hole semi's for a nominal pn drop, nothing shorted out there,
which brings up another point.
How does everyone check transistors/diodes in-circuit? I've heard
many times that just checking the pn junction voltage isn't enough,
and I'll admit I've had a few that had a proper voltage but were
actually bad, but for the most part shouldn't it suffice?
I'm sure this will probably open up a battle between greats, but I'd
love to hear from everyone's experiences on this matter.
Thanks,
Steve
power light blinks). The owner stated that it was a sudden
occurrence, no lightning strikes, shorted wires, etc... This unit uses
two amplifier modules, one STK413-020A for front & center channels,
and a STK412-020A for the surrounds. I removed both modules, the unit
powered up no protection. I put in the front module, the unit powered
up no protection. I removed the front & put in the rear, the unit
went into protection. I assumed the rear module was blown, purchased
the new one for ~$30.00, put it in, & the unit still goes into
protection. I don't have the service manual on this unit, but from
what I can tell, each module uses the same four power supplies. It
looks like there's a ą65V & a ą35V. Both supplies come up w/ no
ripple before the unit goes into protection. I wasn't able to get any
sort of quantitative measurements from the output terminals (at the
amplifier outputs, of course the rear panel terminals are cut off
because of the speaker relays), but I can safely say that none of the
output terminals are shorted to any supply or ground. I checked all
thru hole semi's for a nominal pn drop, nothing shorted out there,
which brings up another point.
How does everyone check transistors/diodes in-circuit? I've heard
many times that just checking the pn junction voltage isn't enough,
and I'll admit I've had a few that had a proper voltage but were
actually bad, but for the most part shouldn't it suffice?
I'm sure this will probably open up a battle between greats, but I'd
love to hear from everyone's experiences on this matter.
Thanks,
Steve