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Please help with component Identification

S

Stan

Jan 1, 1970
0
If anyone can ID the component shown here http://
www.stanleyes.ndo.co.uk/ i'd appreciate it.

Below is further information that i posted to another group before i
had photo's:

Thanks
Stan

---------------- Start -------------------
I'm trying to ID a component taken from the Degauss circuitry of a HP/
Compaq monitor. (Background - This monitor has been exposed to approx
900V instead of the normal 240V which has caused an issue or two. I
have already replaced the 150uF smoothing cap which was getting very
hot and venting.) The monitor is basically functioning OK but i'm
concerned about a particular component. The device is an axial
component with 2 leads, on first glance it looks similar to a 0.5W
resistor with 3 coloured bands. However, i'm sure its not a resistor
since the body is transparent, the PCB marking is Z801 (not "R") and
the PCB symbol is what i would describe as two diodes joined cathode
to cathode. (i.e. |>|<| ). The 3 coloured rings are Green, Grey,
Grey. Within the body of the device there appears to be a small, dark
coloured cylinder.

Starting from terminal 1 of the isolation transformer secondary,
(T1S), the degauss circuitry is basically a series circuit of :
T1S > PTC thermistor > Pair 1 of NO Relay Contacts > Degauss Coil >
Pair 2 of NO Relay Contacts > T2S.
There is also a small capacitor across the degauss coil.
So, when the relay is activated the 240V AC is applied to the degauss
coil, the current will gradually reduce due to the PTC thermistor
heating, at some point the relay is de-activated.

The device in question is connected across the 1st pair of NO Relay
Contacts. Based on this and the PCB symbol described above i think the
device is a Bipolar Transient Voltage Suppressor. I guess its job is
to suppress inductive kick that may occur when the relay is switched
off. Does this sound feasible? I have tried to find similar looking
devices on semiconductor websites with no success. They always seem to
be a Diode style package rather than a "translucent resistor" style i
see before me. This makes me question whether it really is a TVS.

I'm concerned for the health of the component because during operation
i can see a small blue spark across the dark cylinder contained within
the translucent body. This seems to occur at random intervals. During
operation the component has approx 70V AC across it although i suspect
this is only noise picked up by the degauss coil. To test this theory
i connected a 100K resistor across the suspected TVS and observed that
the voltage drops instantly to zero.

I desoldered the component and using my DMM found its resistance to be
greater than 20MOhm. Probably because its knackered (i suspect!)

To summarise my questions are:
Does this sound like a Bipolar TVS?
If not what is this component and are these blue sparks an indication
of device failure?
I imagine the coloured bands indicate a component rating/
specification, (as with resistors). Any idea what rating these colours
indicate?

Many Thanks
------------------End ----------------------
 
B

bz

Jan 1, 1970
0
If anyone can ID the component shown here http://
www.stanleyes.ndo.co.uk/ i'd appreciate it.

Below is further information that i posted to another group before i
had photo's:
.....

I'm concerned for the health of the component because during operation
i can see a small blue spark across the dark cylinder contained within
the translucent body. This seems to occur at random intervals. During
operation the component has approx 70V AC across it although i suspect
this is only noise picked up by the degauss coil. To test this theory
i connected a 100K resistor across the suspected TVS and observed that
the voltage drops instantly to zero.

I desoldered the component and using my DMM found its resistance to be
greater than 20MOhm. Probably because its knackered (i suspect!)

IF it were two diodes joined in that way, it would only go into conduction
when the reverse breakdown voltage of the back biased diode was exceeded,
so it would appear open to your ohm meter.

You could try replacing it with two diodes oriented the same way. Pick
diodes with a low enough reverse breakdown voltage to protect the relay
terminals from pitting and welding while being high enough to withstand any
'normal voltages' that would appear across those contacts.

To summarise my questions are:
Does this sound like a Bipolar TVS?

could be.
If not what is this component and are these blue sparks an indication
of device failure?

don't know.
.....

Many Thanks
------------------End ----------------------





--
bz 73 de N5BZ k

please pardon my infinite ignorance, the set-of-things-I-do-not-know is an
infinite set.

[email protected] remove ch100-5 to avoid spam trap
 
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