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

 

Beogram CD7000

rated by 0 users
This post has 7 Replies | 1 Follower

andyt
Not Ranked
Posts 12
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
andyt Posted: Thu, Oct 4 2012 12:44 PM

Hi

 

I have a Beogram CD7000 that seems to have no power to it. It was working perfectly before I sold it on ebay but it was returned 26 days after the sale not working!! Good old paypal!! 

My suspicion is that the buyer has wired the plug wrongly by changing it from the 2 pin plug to a 3 pin. Is there a fuse inside it ? I cannot see one that is obvious? Or do I presume it is completely dead?

 

Thanks for any advice

Andy

 

Peter
Top 10 Contributor
Earsdon
Posts 11,991
OFFLINE
Founder
Peter replied on Thu, Oct 4 2012 12:58 PM

There is a thermal fuse set at 130 degrees but this would seem unlikely to be the problem. Tricky to see how changing the plug could break it - there are only two wires and I cannot think of what he could have done to blow it! Of course by changing the plug one could argue he has modified the item! Have you check the three pin plug itself? Fuse in there and possible loose wiring?

Peter

chartz
Top 25 Contributor
Burgundy, France
Posts 4,171
OFFLINE
Gold Member
chartz replied on Thu, Oct 4 2012 12:59 PM

Hi,

Yes there is a thermal fuse but it's stuck between the transformer coils and it is of a special type. You cannot replace with standard fuse unfortunately. 

On mine, it had blown because an electrolytic had shorted in the PSU. The very reason why I had it for €30!

Edit: oops Peter you were fast!

Jacques

andyt
Not Ranked
Posts 12
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
andyt replied on Thu, Oct 4 2012 1:10 PM

Thanks

yes checked everything in the main plug. I just don't know what else he would have done to it. Unfortunately completely dead at the moment??

Andy

 

Peter
Top 10 Contributor
Earsdon
Posts 11,991
OFFLINE
Founder
Peter replied on Thu, Oct 4 2012 8:09 PM

My other thought is whether it is as simple as a cracked solder joint from the transport. Boring I know but you will need to do a bit of power finding from the transformer.

Peter

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Thu, Oct 4 2012 8:49 PM

I'm with Peter here.
There is a fairly large Molex type connector near the leftmost edge of the main board.
It's solder joints is often found cracked.
An easy fix if this is indeed the case here.

Martin

andyt
Not Ranked
Posts 12
OFFLINE
Bronze Member
andyt replied on Thu, Oct 4 2012 9:48 PM

Thank you

I will investigate in the daylight tomorrow. As it was posted and then returned I would imagine it may have been thrown around a bit??

Andy

Dillen
Top 10 Contributor
Copenhagen / Denmark
Posts 13,191
OFFLINE
Founder
Moderator
Dillen replied on Fri, Oct 5 2012 11:35 AM

No doubt.
And the solder joints crack from vibrations.

Check the whole board. There can be cracked solder joints elsewhere too, around the voltage regulators and other
large components.

Martin

Page 1 of 1 (8 items) | RSS