A long-time customer talked me into fixing his UR5QW equalizer/echo/etc audio gadget. Looks cool enough.
Said it went totally dead. No output of any kind. And no schematic to be found.
Sure enough, there's a tiny part that looks like either a surface-mount fuse or a PTC protector in line with the power input. Open circuit. And feeding power past it shows a short to ground. Sure enough the tiny SMT voltage regulator is dead as a post. No output. But if I feed it 5 Volts to its output pin from a bench supply, it comes on and functions.
I have no intention of replacing the tiny regulator. Just looks like maybe it wasn't big enough.
Overkill to the rescue. The dead regulator feeds 5 Volts to the chips. A 7805T regulator is rated at 1 Amp. These chips draw just over 1/10 that much current. I don't generally use the gray silicone "sil-pad" insulators, but this chip won't need heat sinking. Just need some place to bolt it down.
The 10uf cap goes from the input pin to the center (ground) pin. Any time the filter cap that feeds it is a distance away (like inside the wall wart) this is recommended to keep the regulator stable.
The foil trace that leads from the old regulator to the chips gets scraped to lap-solder the wire from the new regulator's output pin.
Finally, the old regulator comes out. No need to molest the blown fuse. The new wiring bypasses it.
And now it works. I have had poor luck with smt "power" components like this voltage regulator. Seems that using enough heat to loosen it always damages the ground foil under it. And then maybe it's the heat that caused the part to fail that destroys the glue.
Overkill in defense of reliability is no vice.
73
Said it went totally dead. No output of any kind. And no schematic to be found.
Sure enough, there's a tiny part that looks like either a surface-mount fuse or a PTC protector in line with the power input. Open circuit. And feeding power past it shows a short to ground. Sure enough the tiny SMT voltage regulator is dead as a post. No output. But if I feed it 5 Volts to its output pin from a bench supply, it comes on and functions.
I have no intention of replacing the tiny regulator. Just looks like maybe it wasn't big enough.
Overkill to the rescue. The dead regulator feeds 5 Volts to the chips. A 7805T regulator is rated at 1 Amp. These chips draw just over 1/10 that much current. I don't generally use the gray silicone "sil-pad" insulators, but this chip won't need heat sinking. Just need some place to bolt it down.
The 10uf cap goes from the input pin to the center (ground) pin. Any time the filter cap that feeds it is a distance away (like inside the wall wart) this is recommended to keep the regulator stable.
The foil trace that leads from the old regulator to the chips gets scraped to lap-solder the wire from the new regulator's output pin.
Finally, the old regulator comes out. No need to molest the blown fuse. The new wiring bypasses it.
And now it works. I have had poor luck with smt "power" components like this voltage regulator. Seems that using enough heat to loosen it always damages the ground foil under it. And then maybe it's the heat that caused the part to fail that destroys the glue.
Overkill in defense of reliability is no vice.
73
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