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Old January 17th 04, 12:41 AM
Henry Kolesnik
 
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See my previous post about finding the culprit but I had another problem and
it was the 7815 3 term reg which I replaced with NOS and the Wavetek came to
life but not great. I measured the 15 volt terminal and it was 23 volts so
I may not have much left. I have question on your method. For a shorted
component with very low resistance, 0.2 I can't see much heat created since
P=I squared R. A short of 0.2 ohms wouldn't dissapate much power and all
you'll do is heat the traces, other components and perhaps blow short if
you're lucky!
73
hank wd5jfr
"Eddie Haskel" wrote in message
m...
Henry, dont laugh at this method..it works....read it thru before nixing

it.
I have had this happen before too. simply put about 5 volts at 500 mils on
the b+ line, regulated at the 500 mils. Let it sit for a few minutes and
then go looking for the part to be running warm. The part will be
dissipating 5*.5= 2.5 watts of heat. sooner or later the bad part WILL get
warm. It will NOT lift traces unless they are VERY small.
If this approach fails, the next thing I do is go in with a new(sharp)
razorblade and start as far away from the power supply and cut B+ traces

one
at a time until the short goes away. This isolates the short to a smaller
area.
Suspect Tantalum caps as they usually fail in this mode of low ohms
shorts...let us know when you find it...Eddie

"Henry Kolesnik" wrote in message
...
Sometime ago I think I recall someone posted or wrote an article on a

neat
way to isolate a shorted component on a pcb using common test eqpt but I
can't recall the methodology. I'm trying to find a shorted component on

a
Wavetek 188-S-1257 signal generator. The B+ line reads about 0.4 ohms

and
I'm not having much luck disconnecting componets. I don't have a

schematic
and my eyes ain't what they used to be for tracing and I want to

minimize
the unsoldering. Does anyone recall the article or have a good way?
tnx
hank wd5jfr