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142 gtl blowing fuse at turn on


Negative, the fuse is on the secondary side of the transformer, either the bridge rectifier has failed short or the filter capacitor (C304) has failed short. Check those two components and let us know how you get on. (y)


~Cheers~
 
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The transformer is probably the most reliable single part in the radio. Until lightning hits a utility pole down the street while it's plugged in to the wall outlet.

Flip the "AC-DC" switch on the rear to "DC".

Now see if it still pops that fuse.

If so, I have to wonder if C504 got turned around backwards when the radio got recapped.

And if the fuse holds with the switch set to "DC", this means the overload that popped the fuse is downstream from that switch, somewhere on the radio circuit board.

73
 
Some of the last 142GTL's built didn't use the best bridge rectifiers or heatsink. It was cheaper to mount the rectifier right to the PC board and just use a small heatsink rather than wire it off board to the main power supply heatsink. If the filter cap is in right, check the bridge rectifier next. This assumes the fuse still pops with the AC/DC switch in DC so it removes the radio from the power supply.
 
The transformer is probably the most reliable single part in the radio. Until lightning hits a utility pole down the street while it's plugged in to the wall outlet.

Flip the "AC-DC" switch on the rear to "DC".

Now see if it still pops that fuse.

If so, I have to wonder if C504 got turned around backwards when the radio got recapped.

And if the fuse holds with the switch set to "DC", this means the overload that popped the fuse is downstream from that switch, somewhere on the radio circuit board.

73
Dc has issues never worked when I got the radio
 
Uh oh.

The red wires are supposed be both isolated totally from ground inside the transformer. If the measurement you made was from each red wire to chassis ground, they should read the same.

Time to put one lead of the ohm meter to chassis ground and the other one to either red wire. Should show megohms or more.

73
 

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