Wasted ? Not at all. I,ve learned a lot. I repaired my multimeter and learned to use it. Before I only did DC voltages. Before I started the repair, nothing moved, not the DVD-tray, not the MD-tray and for sure not the display. As I wrote before, it died quietly while on standby.
I’ll put it back together and plug it in the mains and see what happens.
Thanks for your help.
With it all reconnected try measuring the DC voltage on pins 9 and of IC821, pin 9 should be 5.8V and pin 10 should be 8V. Pin 9 is the power to the main micro.
OK, I'll do that. But the transformer has got only 9 pins going out. I'll to get earth somewhere and try to get a reading.
When I plug the mains a hear a faint click, so something get power.
And when I unplug a second click.
Stupid me. Instead of verifying the IC821 on the schematic I bought of the transformer.
But now I see what you are pointing at : the rectifier .
I am reading a book on the discoveries of Nikola tesla and I should have known that AC is transformable, but still stays AC .......
Forgive me.
The voltage from there goes through a pair of circuit protectors (small soldered in plastic fuses) ICP821 and ICP822, you can test those without power with your low ohms range.
Yes, caution is good advice. I’ll get a replacement fuse first. But upstream there is nothing else but the transformer, so could the one out of two similar fuses have blown because of a spike, or fatigue ....
I would suggest connecting a 12 volt (Filament.) bulb such as a 21 watt car stop lamp bulb in place of the fuse while continuing to trace the fault. (Avoid using a 20 watt quartz halogen type bulb as these have very low cold resistance.) Before doing that it would be worth testing for a short circuit on the 4 diodes in the bridge rectifier using the diode test setting on your meter.
Good morning Les, I have a small dashboard bulb of a few watts, could that do ? Checking the diodes on the rectifier is beyond my capabilities. If I replace the fuse and switch on ??
In my limited imagination I see cause of the blown fuse upstream. The main glass fuse on the 220 mains input was never blown. This is a small soldered on fuse immediately behind the transformer, I think, before the rectifier. If I talk nonsense, forgive me.