I'm wondering if I should drill out the affected board areas? There's not too many traces in the C117 area, but there's a lot of stuff going on around CR513. Or is there a better way to restore the integrity of the board?
I couldn't convince myself that the isolation on that ground trace was still good, so I cut it and replaced it with an ugly bodge wire. It seems that what actually finally stopped the catastrophe was the transformer secondary dying, so I bought a replacement transformer from Tek (only slightly more expensive than I expected, but not cheap) And now the unit boots!
Should the fan start when the unit is powered up? The next thing I did was let it sit there while watching it thermally, and the fan never came on. Without anything to compare to, I don't know if this is because the case was open or is another fault. It would make perfect sense if the fan died, causing the caps to overheat and die.
Do you remember what the hot spots were from your thermal analysis? I've got several parts operating around 60C. The two parts clipped to the chassis were also quite warm, with the power resistor at 65C. Ambient was around 18C.
Before plugging in the new transformer, I compared winding resistances with the old transfer just to confirm that the old one was dead. Here's the new resistances in case it might help someone else troubleshooting their unit: (Note I swapped the Orange/White pin from the connector order.)
BLK -+ PINK -+
|- 3 |- 2.7
BLK/W -+ ORNG/W -+
|- 14.3 |- 2.6
WHT -+ PINK -+
|- 16.5
BRN/W -+ PURP -+
|- 3.9 |- 0.75
BRN -+ PURP -+