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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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Posted to sci.electronics.design,sci.electronics.equipment,sci.electronics.repair,alt.engineering.electrical
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Looking for schematic and/or manual for TP325 triple power supply. This is a
70's (?) lab bench supply. Like this: http://tinyurl.com/243y95 Thanks, -- DaveC This is an invalid return address Please reply in the news group |
#2
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DaveC wrote:
Looking for schematic and/or manual for TP325 triple power supply. This is a 70's (?) lab bench supply. Like this: http://tinyurl.com/243y95 Why do you need the schematic? It is almost certainly going to be an absolutely bog-standard mains transformer followed by series pass linear regulators. -- Sue |
#3
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Why do you need the schematic? It is almost certainly going to be an
absolutely bog-standard mains transformer followed by series pass linear regulators. 1. Learning. Education. 2. If i toast a component, I hate reverse-engineering a schematic. 3. And being a former tech writer, it's a disease, needing to have all docs on file. (c: -- DaveC This is an invalid return address Please reply in the news group |
#4
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![]() "DaveC" wrote in message obal.net... Why do you need the schematic? It is almost certainly going to be an absolutely bog-standard mains transformer followed by series pass linear regulators. 1. Learning. Education. 2. If i toast a component, I hate reverse-engineering a schematic. 3. And being a former tech writer, it's a disease, needing to have all docs on file. (c: You do need the schematics (unless you are familiar with that particular design). Some supplies of that genre are fairly complicated. |
#5
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Why do you need the schematic? It is almost certainly going to be an
absolutely bog-standard mains transformer followed by series pass linear regulators. I would add that one's need for a schematic for any circuit is inversely proportional to that person's expertise in the art of electrons. -- DaveC This is an invalid return address Please reply in the news group |
#6
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DaveC ) writes:
Why do you need the schematic? It is almost certainly going to be an absolutely bog-standard mains transformer followed by series pass linear regulators. I would add that one's need for a schematic for any circuit is inversely proportional to that person's expertise in the art of electrons. I suspect people get something out of taking things apart. IN doing that, they make the piece of equipment less of a black box, and putting their hands on it when they can't hurt it (because they've decided it's junk already) takes away some of the fear. Tracing the circuit is another way. There is fear of not knowing what's there, there is fear of some mystery circuit. Yet tracing the circuit gives you intimate contact with the unit. It's something as valuable as just taking junk apart, in devaluing the mystery. And as he said, it's likely to be pretty standard. And that's one of the tricks of circuit tracing. Get a bit of information, and then make the assumption that it's a fairly standard circuit based on that information. So if it uses a certain IC, you look at the manufacturer's datasheet or application note for the device, and then use the "suggested circuit" and see if the unit's circuit matches that. The beginner will always approach things in the "it must be a mystery, I need a schematic". But, it's not always beyond them, it's merely that they perceive a big first step. But the "oldtimer" who is capable in such things, they likely got capable because they got over that perceived need for a schematic, and they started signal tracing and making assumptions that the circuit will be fairly standard. Hence the move to an "oldtimer" can be shortened by making that step early. Michael |
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