Hi everyone, I'm working on a Sony TA-88 hifi amp which has pretty severe ripple on the DC supply rails. The ripple amplitude pulsates at about 1/30th the frequency of the ripple itself i.e. the pulsation waveform period is 700-800ms ... and I apologize I didn't grab a scope trace of this because my PC wasn't hooked up to the scope at the time (but just taking a pic on my phone would still have been more useful than trying to describe it
)
Anyway I have two theories.. 1/ components in the bridge rectifier are not functioning properly or 2/ given that ripple is a function of load current, the load current draw is pulsating and creating the ripple pattern I'm seeing on the scope.
To test this I'd like to disconnect the load from the bridge so I can put the scope across it's unloaded output rails. The problem is the bridge is on the same PCB as the output stage of the amplifier circuit. I need to create an open circuit on the PCB, but I can't think how to do this without either desoldering several components, or deliberately damaging the PCB track which would be quicker but seems unnecessarily destructive.
Any tips/tricks for quickly and ideally non-destructively creating an open circuit to unload PS circuits for testing would be very gratefully received. P14-16 of the attached service manual has the relevant schematic and PCB layout although it doesn't show the PCB tracks unfortunately.

Anyway I have two theories.. 1/ components in the bridge rectifier are not functioning properly or 2/ given that ripple is a function of load current, the load current draw is pulsating and creating the ripple pattern I'm seeing on the scope.
To test this I'd like to disconnect the load from the bridge so I can put the scope across it's unloaded output rails. The problem is the bridge is on the same PCB as the output stage of the amplifier circuit. I need to create an open circuit on the PCB, but I can't think how to do this without either desoldering several components, or deliberately damaging the PCB track which would be quicker but seems unnecessarily destructive.
Any tips/tricks for quickly and ideally non-destructively creating an open circuit to unload PS circuits for testing would be very gratefully received. P14-16 of the attached service manual has the relevant schematic and PCB layout although it doesn't show the PCB tracks unfortunately.