From: ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk (Tony Duell)
Hi,
....Repairing a switching power supply is one the last
things I would want to do.
Why?
Personally I've never had any luck repairing switch mode PSUs
either....obviously there's some hole in my understanding of them....
In which case you need practice in repairing them ;-)
More seriously, there are easy faults with SMPSUs and difficult faults.
Easy faults include things like the mains filter cap[acitors going
short-circuit nad blowing the fuse. Change the capacitors and it'll be
fine. Difficult faults include the all-too-common short-circuit chopper
transistor. It may have been damaged by some other component failing (say
an open-circuit in the snubber network across the chopper transformer
primary), and unless you find and correct that other fualt, your new
chopper will fail at switch-on. And the shorted chopper might have
damaged other components too (like burning out th ecurrent sense resistor
im its emitter circuit, then taking out a couple of small-signal
transistors too).
Hi
I've found this as well. You think you got it fixed and pop, there goes
another chopper transistor.
Still, I just recently fixed a switcher. It did help to have a schematic.
It was traced to an open wire on a pulse transformer. I just removed
enough potting material to expose the broken wire and spliced more
wire to it. It was stressed from the day of manufacture.
The supply has been fine since then.
Dwight
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