Another update on the long running repair of this Fluke 5700a, and I've resorted to sending it to Fluke UK for investigation.
After the latest issue with it failing the 1ohm and 1.9ohm part of artifact calibration, I checked out the A9 Ohms cal and A10 Ohms main boards. I couldn't find anything wrong though, and to be honest was a bit lost at this point for where to look.
I contacted Fluke and surprisingly they agreed to look at it for me. I'm surprised firstly that they would even deal with me as a private customer not a business. And secondly these units are 2yrs out of support now. They quoted me a standard investigation fee, I won't say what it was but it was hundreds of £££. And any technician time to repair a fault would be added on top of that. I was a bit worried this may spiral out of control !. However as a minimum for the cost of the investigation fee they would test all the boards and be able to tell me what was good, and what was faulty.
Anyway I dropped it off, and a couple of weeks later they contacted me to say all boards tested. 1ohm fail caused by A3 Motherboard, 1.9ohm fail caused by A8 Switch Matrix. Additionally the 3 big relays behind the front panel were swapped out with new ones, and no change was observed so the original ones were refitted. They did not have any replacement boards available, and seemed to think there wasn't much further they could progress with this.
I did try and buy some spare relays from them, but it seems even Fluke is having difficulty getting hold of them. So I accepted their findings, and surprisingly Fluke dropped the investigation fee and just charged me for the technician time which was substantially less.
I have to say the service from Fluke has been excellent, and something a certain other large test equipment manufacturer could learn from. The only thing I was a bit bummed about was I sent the unit in to them in a proper FLuke Calibration box, with handles,and the proper foam inserts. As standard practise they binned it, and returned the unit to me in a large generic box, with no handles (making it awkward to manage) and (badly) packed with expanding foam
So armed with this new information that A3 and A8 are the source of the latest faults, I did a bit of fault finding on A8. lo and behold CR13 is short circuit. Clearly wasn't causing any self test errors, but perhaps contributing to this new fault in some way ?. Looking at the schematic it's related in some way to "Out Lo", "Out/Sense Lo", "PA Com", "OSC Sense Lo", "Int Sense Lo" . Looks like CR12 and CR13 are protection diodes limiting the voltage to +/-0.6v so CR13 short, I'm not sure what effect that would have. I've ordered a new part anyway, so will try it and see.