It seems a bit of an assumption that the spark gap flashed over and took out the fusible resistor. You didn't say anything about what checks you've carried out. Have you checked for shorts after the resistor? The bridge rectifier might be shorted for instance, or maybe the switching FET.
It would be a shame if your new resistor immediately joined its predecessor.
It seems a bit of an assumption that the spark gap flashed over and took out the fusible resistor. You didn't say anything about what checks you've carried out. Have you checked for shorts after the resistor? The bridge rectifier might be shorted for instance, or maybe the switching FET.
It would be a shame if your new resistor immediately joined its predecessor.
It looks like the spark gap in parallel with the MOV was supposed to protect from surges, shame they cheeped out on the MOV.
I agree, definitely check the bridge etc.
Everything seems to check ok, actually there was a blob of solder rattling around in the case so maybe that caused it. Also the room it lives in is subject to large daily temperature swings and condensation at night so that could of caused the spark gap to fire too.
I've found some MOVs but am unsure of which is safe to use across 240VAC UK mains (via that fusible resistor), "07D361K" "07D431K" "471D07" "7D471K", which would be best suited to this circuit? These were the only ones I have that are small enough to fit on the PCB.
I'm leaning toward 07D431K since the mains can reach 250VAC here on occasion, but maybe 471 would be better? Also these are pulled from old equipment and I understand MOVs degrade with age.