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David Farber David Farber is offline
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Default SMPS wall wart failure.

Arfa Daily wrote:
"Phil Allison" wrote in message
...
David Farber wrote:

Eventually I found an SMD zener
diode that was shorted. There are no identifying marks on the diode
other than its color which is the standard looking orange. I am
fairly sure it's a
zener because the pc board has it marked as ZD-2. Its location in
the circuit is in parallel with the 5 volt power supply diode that
comes off of
the secondary of the switching transformer. The power diode has two
sets of
numbers. The top row is marked 540 (perhaps an SB540?) on the
bottom row is
marked 849. That diode is ok. Only the zener is shorted. I was
wondering if
there was some ballpark zener voltage that I could use to replace
the old one.



** Never seen a rectifier diode and zener in *parallel* before.

Only purpose I can think of is the main diode is a Schottky type and
needs protecting from excess reverse voltage spikes.

Schottys range at about 30V up so maybe try a 27V zener.



... Phil



I think it's maybe a 'lost in translation' thing Phil. Although he
does suggest that the 'zener' -if indeed it is one - is in parallel
with the rectifier diode, I think the intention was to convey that it
is in parallel with the 5 volt rail, immediately *after* the
rectifier. So I guess that would be in parallel with the main filter
cap, depending on whether there is a choke before or after it ... ??

Arfa


Apologies folks. Looks like I misread the pc traces. The anode of the power
diode is only in common with the secondary of the transformer. The cathode
connects to one end of the zener diode, the filter cap (which I replaced),
then goes to a choke, then to the output wires.

Checking further, I've discovered that the shorted zener diode was in
parallel with the filter cap. That explains the low, in circuit ESR reading.
The negative side of the filter cap and zener are also connected back to the
secondary of the transformer. I imagine the zener is used to protect the cap
and output circuit from voltage spikes?

Thanks for your replies.
--
David Farber
Los Osos, CA