All,
I've been putting together an electronics bench with a bunch of older electronics test equipment. I'm not a pro in any way, but I have been designing electronics for many years as a hobby.
Well, I had an interesting adventure today. I have a really nice Tabor 8020 20Mhz function generator I got for cheap and I was testing it with another cheap find today, a LeCroy LC534AL 1Ghz DSO.... I was just sitting there looking at the waveform when all of it went kinda funny. Because the leads basically go across my desk and are just a probe connected to an aligator clip, I though it was just a bad connection.
Then I looked up and saw smoke pouring out of the 8020! I wish I'd had the presence to record it but my first thought was to yank the power out of it....
Anyway, I opened it up quickly (while still hot) hopping I could find the source of the smoke... Well, I didn't need to rush, here's what I discovered:
Tantalum caps roasted
Another shot
One of his friends that cooked off before....
Underside of board looks OK
Metal shielding took the brunt of the burn.
So basically, a couple of tantalum caps just lost it. I'm trying to get the schematics from Tabor right now - luckily it's all one sided through hole. Looks like I am going to have to replace most of the passives in the area.
Does anyone have a good way of determining the values of passives if you can't read the markings? Also, any thoughts on using something other than tantalums in this application? Of course I have no idea what this part of the circuit does, although it was under a metal shield.
I'm also looking at that large yellow resistor & wondering if it was damaged as well...
Thoughts, ideas, action plans are most welcome.
Chris.