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I found the bad tant cap, it was a 22 ufd, 20 volt, not any AVX but a
yellowish tan blob with a big L. I replaced it with an electrolytic. I found it using my Fluke 87 that measures to the nearest tenth of an ohm and only the suspect cap would flicker between 0.3 and 0.2 ohms, all the rest were 0.4 or 0.3. Now I'm kicking myself for not buying an HP meter that could read 1/100ths maybe 1/1000ths because I could see no use for it. Now I can see a use and one is on my list but nevertheless my Fluke saved a lot of desoldering. The Wavetek still doesn't work as something else is keeping the voltage low and I think it might be a regulator. Now I wish I could find a schematic for the Wavetek 188-S-1257, as it would keep me from wasting so much time. Thanks for all the tips. guys. 73 hank wd5jfr "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 |
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