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Old October 12th 03, 06:43 PM
tomagain
 
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After fixing the negative wire and replacing the diode, the radio
powers up just fine. I'll find out Monday when Ronnie puts it back in
his truck if it works like it used to. Thanks especially to the both
of you, because you both were dead on in what you suggested. If I
missed thanking anyone else, I apoligize. Total cost of repair
excluding my time is 59 cents for the diode and $3 for an inline blade
fuse holder. I think I'll just let Ronnie buy me lunch......
Have a great day............


On Fri, 10 Oct 2003 21:15:02 -0400, tomagain
wrote:

To all that replied......Thanks for your help. Here is where I am
now..........
The 1 inch wire from the negative power connector to the pcb board was
not passing the negative connection. I wired in a new jumper. Now when
I put the bench power supply on it, I only get less than 1 volt on the
meter. Unplug it from the radio, and it jumps back up to normal. So I
suspect that diode got fried as well as the wire.I will try and get
the diode replaced as soon as I can get one, and will let you all know
how it came out. So all of you have been a great help. My one question
for now is... If I remove that " suspect " diode, without replacing
it, should the radio power up? or do I need to wait until I replace it
before I put the power back on it?
Thanks again to all!!!


On Wed, 08 Oct 2003 16:06:05 -0700, Frank Gilliland
wrote:

In , ojunk
(OZARK333) wrote:

He is correct about the reverse polarity protection diode.


No, he's not. If the diode was shorted, it would have blown the fuse/breaker on
the power supply (or melted something else if the supply wasn't protected). If
the diode was open, the radio would have worked as normal when the power was
connected properly. Neither were the case.

He was measuring from the negative terminal of the power supply to points inside
the radio, where he was getting 12V everywhere. The only way that can happen is
if the negative lead is disconnected. Try it yourself (no, it won't hurt the
radio). What happened is that the reverse-polarity protection diode did it's
job, and did it exceptionally well. When the power is connected backwards, the
diode is supposed to show a short and blow the fuse, but since there wasn't any
fuse it melted a power lead. That's one stout diode!

Anyway, the damage should be minimal, and certainly much less than if the diode
had failed.





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