And since the wires between the two boards were the way they were i would also check the wires within the transformer "case".
Ahem.....
And since the wires between the two boards were the way they were i would also check the wires within the transformer "case".
unsolder R5 of 4.7k toward to C5 and measureR1 = 48,5Ω / R3 = 2,2KΩ
the 4 resistors are OK so are the 2 inductors...
Yes, that's what is left now... the transformer area (as I said before)Ahem.....
Ok. R5 desoldered (4,7KΩ indeed) and now give me some mn to resolder R1-2-3-4 and power on...unsolder R5 of 4.7k toward to C5 and measure
If it's good, leave it unsoldered,
stick R4. R2. R1. R3 in place and power the microphone
unsolder R5 of 4.7k toward to C5 and measure
R5 desoldered (4,7KΩ indeed)
let's also eliminate any defects from the audio circuit up to the transformerSure, worth a try, but resistors rarely (read: pretty much never) fail short-circuit...
Figured as much... Even if the capacitor was completely shorted, a 4k7 load would not have dragged down the power rail down to under 2v.
the bell that shields the transformer must be opened and the situation of the wires must be seen2,5v at all the R and the 2 L (down the board) with 4,7KΩ unsoldered...
Are we gonna check now what's inside the "bell" of the transfo ???
12,75MΩ (mega-ohms) between ground and R4 & ground and R3but first, disconnect the microphone and measure if there is a short circuit between gnd and the ends of resistors R4 R3
let's also eliminate any defects from the audio circuit up to the transformer
measure if there is a short circuit between gnd and the ends of resistors R4 R3
Are we gonna check now what's inside the "bell" of the transfo ???
And since the wires between the two boards were the way they were i would also check the wires within the transformer "case".
... and me from yesterday's night...I "only" suggested this an hour and a half ago...
123,7Ωmeasures ohmic resistance between C4 and GND
is the primary of the transformer:
140.2 ohms
I wanted to rule it out completely
BJT 1015 and R6 1.5k burned out among OTHER faults
you can't know who 'worked' before in the microphone and howSilicon does indeed usually fail short; resistors don't. Even if the BJT was shorted, the resistor would've seen maybe ~300mW, if my math isn't too far off. Not exactly "burn" territory...
but you can accidentally touch something when measuringWhile that is of course true, all(?) of the soldering looks pretty "factory" to me. But what do i know?
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