A buddy dropped me out a Yamaha mixer today , It took a little fall while powered up at a gig.
It instantly popped its mains fuse when it took the impact.
So I opened her up , heavy duty switchmode inside ,lots of big heavy components on the board ,secured along two sides with six screws . I lifted out the power board and sure enough the force of the bump had caused the board to flex and one of the primary pins of the switcher transformer had made direct contact with the chassis. It was like a spot weld and the board in that area had layer of evaporated metal from the arc. The crazy thing was under the board they had gone to the trouble of putting a strong insulating plastic layer down ,but this only covered less than half the area of the underside of the board . I also noticed the trimming of the component legs wasnt very uniform ,some protruded about 5 mm below the board , The mountings were about 8mm high ,Just gently pressing the board down by hand I could feel she was hitting the deck . For the sake of a few cents worth of polycarbonate sheet, a small plastic standoff in the middle of the board or even just better quality control on the trimming of the components, this would never have been an issue . Anyway switcher transformer primary winding intact , but still no show after swabbing off the vapourised metal residue, Bridge rect and caps all fine too , so I guess my issue is with the switcher transistors . I wonder should I document the fault and the cure and buzz Yamahaahahahah sevice the details . Its my experience that you get no thanks for telling the giant he has egg on his face ,maybe the best thing to do is document it all up nice so that owners of this model can either diy a fix or get someone technical to do the nessesary preventative mods .If you happen to own an Emx5000-12 or know someone who does best take remedial action to stop your mixer turning into a fireworks display at some point down the line .
It instantly popped its mains fuse when it took the impact.
So I opened her up , heavy duty switchmode inside ,lots of big heavy components on the board ,secured along two sides with six screws . I lifted out the power board and sure enough the force of the bump had caused the board to flex and one of the primary pins of the switcher transformer had made direct contact with the chassis. It was like a spot weld and the board in that area had layer of evaporated metal from the arc. The crazy thing was under the board they had gone to the trouble of putting a strong insulating plastic layer down ,but this only covered less than half the area of the underside of the board . I also noticed the trimming of the component legs wasnt very uniform ,some protruded about 5 mm below the board , The mountings were about 8mm high ,Just gently pressing the board down by hand I could feel she was hitting the deck . For the sake of a few cents worth of polycarbonate sheet, a small plastic standoff in the middle of the board or even just better quality control on the trimming of the components, this would never have been an issue . Anyway switcher transformer primary winding intact , but still no show after swabbing off the vapourised metal residue, Bridge rect and caps all fine too , so I guess my issue is with the switcher transistors . I wonder should I document the fault and the cure and buzz Yamahaahahahah sevice the details . Its my experience that you get no thanks for telling the giant he has egg on his face ,maybe the best thing to do is document it all up nice so that owners of this model can either diy a fix or get someone technical to do the nessesary preventative mods .If you happen to own an Emx5000-12 or know someone who does best take remedial action to stop your mixer turning into a fireworks display at some point down the line .