Phil.c wrote:Well, anythings worth a try. I had a fader bank go down with a blown cap, very visible, it also burnt the connector strips going to it, I replaced the cap and repaired the strips but the cap must have caused damage to another componant, maybe a chip?
That can be explained in a way, Phil... when that cap blew, it took out the trace(s), the 'connector strips'. That's the visible damage, however those silk screened circuit boards are multi-layer. There's most likely traces that were destroyed in the internal layers '
invisible' upon inspection even to the best eyeballs. Capacitors have specific purposes, in this case it's most likely for stabilizing the 5VDC distribution (
it's clearly not for audio bypass purposes)... they'll generally hold a charge stable @ 5VDC. Once you open up a trace(s), the potential for ancillary damage increases greatly. Repairing them is often onerous and odious at best... canare wire, schematic diagram(s), an ohm meter and a good bit of time / patience (
uhgg). The offending trace(s) would have to checked end-to-end and repaired. Even when that's complete, ya never know... and then there's the ol '
what dafuq actually caused the problem' thing that should be considered. Chances are, flipping the 'on' switch is just gonna light the replaced cap back up and the same issue will '
magically' return. The problem most likely being elsewhere...
From what I'm reading here, 4 of 8 channel faders are affected... I'd check any op amps and/or the discreet stuff involved, the circuitry involved most likely handles everything in pairs - 4 channels each (
1-4, 5-8 respectively)... I'm actually speculating, as I don't have the prints in front of me and I'm up to my ass in alligators of my own at the moment. I'll keep an eye on this thread tho, maybe I can be of some sort of help...
Pardon for any bandwidth waste...
AND of course, for transparency purposes... you knew this was coming...
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