Sign in   |  Join   |  Help
Untitled Page

ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022
READ ONLY FORUM

This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022

 

Beomaster 3000 (Type 2402) - blows fuses

rated by 0 users
This post has 25 Replies | 1 Follower

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond Posted: Sat, Jul 26 2014 7:15 AM

Hi,

 

new here. i have had a Beomaster 2402 for several years, got it from a boot sale in UK. sometimes its been a bit crackly but no major problems. I now live in Australia (same mains power as UK) and it has recently fused. Both 1A fuses in the back blow when its turned on. I had a look inside (I have some amatuer electronics experience) and it looked like the 5000uF power capacitor had burst. I got three replacements for the big caps, all 4000uF 75V (closest I could get) and replaced them. When turned on, get same result, just fuses. I can't see any other fused components and it is fairly clean inside. Anyone have any ida what could be causing this? Can a faulty transformer do this? I opened up the transformer and its sealed unit - nothing unusual visible inside...

Thanks for any help, any pointers to whoever else might help would be great. Really don't want to bin this!

 

Theo

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Sat, Jul 26 2014 9:22 AM

Welcome to Beoworld !

Separate the transformer secondary to rule out the transformer.
Transformer good? Then move on to the rectifiers (there's one on the main board and a larger one
on the chassis.
Put an ohmmeter across their secondaries to see if they are loaded too heavily.
Check for shorted output stage transistors and/or bad idle current trimmers.

Martin

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond replied on Sat, Jul 26 2014 12:39 PM

Hi, thanks for the reply. Sorry, I don't know what any of that means. I will post some pics. I don't know what the transformer secondary is. I can see the rectifier attached to the transformer but not any others. Where are the output stage transistors?

Thanks, 

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member

Capacitors after replacing.

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member

View inside.

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond replied on Sat, Jul 26 2014 1:16 PM

Sorry for my slowness.. I now realise that by 'Separate the transformer secondary to rule out the transformer.' you mean just disconnect the output of the transformer? I will try that now.Thanks.

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member

Ok, progress. :) so I disconnected the transformer output shown. Plugged it in and the power lamp now glows steady and nothing fuses. What next??

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond replied on Sat, Jul 26 2014 1:31 PM

...just need a bit of help with this.. "Put an ohmmeter across their secondaries to see if they are loaded too heavily.
Check for shorted output stage transistors and/or bad idle current trimmers."

 

Thanks.

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Sat, Jul 26 2014 2:09 PM

Oh, that's a Beomaster 3000 (possibly type 2402).
I thought you had a Beomaster 2400-2, - not that it matters much, really because
the principles are the same.

And don't get me wrong when I say this, but if what I wrote above makes little
or no sense to you, you may not be the right person to tackle this fault.
And I mean this in the best of ways, for your safety as well as that of the Beomaster.

Anyway, based on your findings so far it sounds like a burned output
stage to me, - a problem that in these DC-coupled amplifiers can put even
trained tech guys to the test.

Martin

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond replied on Sat, Jul 26 2014 2:13 PM

Hi,

no offence taken! But I do have some electronics experience, its was just the terminology confused me. I was hoping it was the recitifier. I have taken it out, a ITT B80 C5000/3000. I'm just wondering if I can test it and replace.

 

Thanks.

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond replied on Sat, Jul 26 2014 2:25 PM

OK.. I do know how to test a diode, and my meter readings accross the rectifier do not look right:

from 'red' input to output is low (resistance)

from 'white' input to output is high (should be low)

from earth 'out' to red and white input is high resistance (should be low)

Hope this makes sense, but it looks like all but one (red to + out) diode is blown.

Is its worth replacing this, or is this just indicative of a more complex fault?

You are right, that if its more complex, I am probably stuck and it would not be worth me getting this fixed professionally, in which caseis there somone who would want it for parts (pay shipping only)? I don't really want to just bin it, its too beautiful.. although I have thought of perhaps just putting a modern amp inside it (sacrilage!!).

Thanks,

Theo

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Sat, Jul 26 2014 3:28 PM

How high is "high" and how low is "low" ?

If the diodes in the rectifier are open circuits it won't blow the fuse(s) but one or more shorted diodes may.
The diodes may go open circuit from overloading, that can happen if a circuit after the rectifier has shorted - and that
will typically be an output stage (or both).

Martin

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond replied on Sat, Jul 26 2014 3:41 PM

'low' is zero and 'high' no reading, on my meter. I guess this means it could be the output stage. But is it worth replacing the rectifier?

Thanks

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Sat, Jul 26 2014 4:57 PM

Well, the rectifier is dead then.
But why ?
The rectifier itself may be the only bad component but you won't know until you've checked a bit more;
With the Beomaster unpowered put your ohmmeter across the red and white/red leads on the rear
of the amplifier board and let us know the reading.
Then put it across the four emitter resistors, one by one, and let us know the readings here.
They are most often red (or grey) ceramic components and they sit towards the rear of the
amplifier board, close to the driver transistors (with the star-shaped cooling fins), not far from where
you just measured. You may have to scrape a little red or grey paint away from their pins to bare enough metal
to measure on.

Martin

Edit: Being a moderator, I have taken the liberty to edit the thread title to ease searches etc.

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond replied on Sun, Jul 27 2014 12:04 AM

Between red/white and red leads, its zero, because they both connect to the same contact of the centre power output cap. If I disconnect those pins (they unclip from the board) the reading is 128K. The reading across all four red resistors is 1ohm.

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Sun, Jul 27 2014 7:43 AM

Very good.

Now, with the red and red/white leads lifted away from the board, we need the readings across:
- The pin where the red lead was at the center of the rear edge and the black lead in the rear corner of the same board
- The pin where the red/white lead was and the black/white in the opposite rear corner.
That's the power supply lines to the two amplifiers.

Martin

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond replied on Sun, Jul 27 2014 9:19 AM

Hmm. the reading is not stable and climbs steadily from about 20K,  settling at 50K. Same for both sides. (no power connected of course, perhaps my meter battery is a bit low.)

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Sun, Jul 27 2014 12:18 PM

That could be correct.
Then go directly onto the output stage transistors at the rear chassis.
Measure across emitter and collector on all four.

Martin

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond replied on Sun, Jul 27 2014 12:42 PM

left to right looking from the back, they were: 10K, 35K, 35K and 35K. Again not very stable to read, but tge leftmost was definitely lower than the others.

Thanks, hope this is getting somewhere!

Theo

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Sun, Jul 27 2014 2:11 PM

Does your meter have a diode tester function ?
If it has, please use this for testing across C-E on the output stages.
Expect readings of apprx 0.5-0.7V.
(swap meter leads/polarity if you cannot get any results within this range).

Martin

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond replied on Sun, Jul 27 2014 2:22 PM

ok, no, unfortunately don't have that function.

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Sun, Jul 27 2014 8:38 PM

A bit difficult to move much further.
The 10K is a bit weird when the others are so close but there doesn't
seem to be any shorted output transistors so I suppose it would be OK to
replace the rectifier (if you haven't already done so), fit new fuses and test it.
Test without speakers first.

Ideally, a variac with mains current monitoring would be the place to connect
a unit like this but unfortunately that's not part of a standard household.
It would have given us an opportunity to power up slowly and "carefully" rather than
going full power at once, plus it would provide a certain electrical safety.

Martin

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member

Hi, can you tell if the capacitors are wired correctly? Negatives are all to the right in the pic. Thanks.

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Mon, Jul 28 2014 10:40 AM

There are several different versions but if you compare to this (seems to be same version), it looks right.

http://archivedarchivedforum2.beoworld.org/cfs-filesystemfile.ashx/__key/CommunityServer.Components.PostAttachments/00.00.35.78.67/BEO3000_5F00_optres_2D00_2.JPG

Martin

hammond
Not Ranked
Posts 18
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
hammond replied on Mon, Jul 28 2014 11:20 AM

Success! With new caps and rectifier, (generic 200V one) its working perfectly. Sounds much better too, the crackle and pop on turning on has gone. Very happy. Looking forward to another 43 years of groovin' (the amp, not me!).

 

Thanks for your help Martin,

 

Theo

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Mon, Jul 28 2014 3:07 PM

Well, a bit of luck never gets in the way, does it ? Smile

Martin

Page 1 of 1 (26 items) | RSS