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If it was shorted the fuse would blow
as soon as the amp was attached to a source of power. Excessive C-E leakage is a partial short (where the C-E resistance with no bias or signal applied is significantly above zero but well below normal). You should have known that. I can see some things never change. -- Professor wrote: Collector-Emitter leakage... LOL What he's got is a shorted transistor. That's got nothing to do with leakage. Professor www.telstar-electronics.com Bill Eitner wrote: The transistor that heats up immediately is bad (excessive C-E leakage). The DVM test procedure is to use the diode check function. Imagine a transistor as two diodes back-to-back with the base being the common element. Test from base to emitter, and from base to collector. You should only get a reading in one direction on each test (when the base is above either of the other elements), and it should be around 600 mV. |
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