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Repairing a sony minidisc deck mds-s38

ville900

Mar 31, 2013
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Hello,

I am new to this forum and happy to join.
I have a sony minidisc deck coming from Japan. It uses 100 V voltage (Japan one). I live in France so I usually use it with 220 V voltage, using a power transformer. This works fine.

Recently, unfortunately, my son plugged it directly on the wall, so directly on 220V. As you can imagine, it is not working anymore !

I opened it to see if there is some kind of obvious fuse that could have melted or something obvious. I could not see anything clear.

I must add that I am not at all a specialist of electronics, and by far. Another way to say is that I know nothing here ! Just the basics from back when I was a student...

I have taken some pictures of the inside if this can help. Here they are :

This first one shows where the power cable plugs it into a circuit board (black cable):
wa3dwl.jpg


There seems to be 2 blue components under (capacitors ???) and 1 white one in the middle (???).

Here is as see from above, the circuit board with the input (right) and output on the left or so I think:
25s6g5s.jpg


Close-up on the circuit board where the power cable comes in:
1/ Right hand-side
20kreoh.jpg



2/ Left hand-side
10o0l78.jpg



Many thanks if you can help me here as I am kind of stuck.
This deck is close to new apart from this problem. And I have many minidiscs which I won't be able to listen to anymore if I cannot repair it.
 
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(*steve*)

¡sǝpodᴉʇuɐ ǝɥʇ ɹɐǝɥd
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Jan 21, 2010
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Nice photos, but can you give us one of the top side of the board.

The problem is almost certainly going to be on the part of the board that has the caution hashing over it. The key candidates are a mosfet, a rectifier or a capacitor (in that order). If a fuse has blown, it's almost certainly an indication that one of these has failed.

Bridge rectifiers and mosfets generally fail short circuit unless they've blown themselves apart. A failed capacitor in this case is likely to be physically damaged (bulging, leaking, or blown apart).
 

ville900

Mar 31, 2013
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Hello,

Thanks for your answer.
By top side, you mean he other side, the one with the components? If this is the case, I cannot access it as it is still mounted, and it is facing down to the box of the minidisc desk.

Someone mentioned that there might be a "thermal fuse" in the power converter and that this fuse might be blown, but that I'd have to unmount and open the power converter to check this... which I don't know how to do.

Does this sound like a possibility to you?

Do you I have to unmount the circuit board to take pictures of the "top side" (which for me is the down side)?

Thanks again
 

davenn

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Sep 5, 2009
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yes the transformer is likely to have a thermal fuse in it, you can just see the corner of the transformer on the right side of the first pic

With the power disconnected, and your multimeter in Ohms mode, check for continuity between the 2 pins of that orange connector.
You should see continuity measuring maybe 1000 Ohms ( the resistance of the primary of the transformer)

cheers
Dave
 

ville900

Mar 31, 2013
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Hello,

There is no continuity at all between the 2 pins of the orange connector (infinite resistance). I checked also, my ohm meter is working fine. So it looks like something is broken or melted.
 

davenn

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OK now just to confirm that its the transformer thats open circuit
go across the 2 centre pins of the transformer primary as seen in pic 4

thats the 2 pins that have tinned traces leading down at an angle and away to the right

if its open circuit there, then the transformer is faulty and you would need a replacement.
That complete raised PSU board is probably sold as a complete spare part

Dave
 

ville900

Mar 31, 2013
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Hi davenn,

thanks for your input. It is actually open circuit between the 2 pins that you mentioned.
Do you have any clues as to where I could find the whole PSU (what does PSU stand for?) board as a replacement as I am a total newbie?

Also, would there be a way to open the transformer and to repair it or is that beyond feasibility?

Many thanks
 

(*steve*)

¡sǝpodᴉʇuɐ ǝɥʇ ɹɐǝɥd
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PSU == Power Supply Unit (aka Power Supply, Power Supply board, etc)
 

davenn

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You wouold probably have to go to Sony or one of their service centres and see if they can supply/are willing to supply a replacement board if its atill available as a spare part
Any bit of gear over 5 years old will be difficult to get spares for many of the big companies dont stock spares for "older " equip any more. They want you to buy their latest whizz-bang model ;)

Dave

PS. ya never know you may find one on eBay
 

ville900

Mar 31, 2013
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Thanks. The unit is 16 years old... so I guess it's most likely supplies will be out of stock. And I heard that minidiscs in general are discontinued or will be very soon as the technology is out-of-date.
So ebay is my most likely track then !
Many thanks
 

(*steve*)

¡sǝpodᴉʇuɐ ǝɥʇ ɹɐǝɥd
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A possible alternative, if the board just supplies power, is to use an external power supply that can produce the same rails. Alternatively make a simpler board that can create the required rails from a voltage supplied from an external power supply.
 

ville900

Mar 31, 2013
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Thank you.
This sounds interesting... but too complex for me I presume.
I am close to giving up. Or I'll try to find a replacement circuit board in an old minidisc drive on ebay.
 

ville900

Mar 31, 2013
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Hello,
I am reopening this topic after 4 years as I finally got the technical drawings from Sony showing the inputs and outputs of this power transformer. Would anyone be able to help me rebuild it, or to rebuild it for me, from these drawings?
 

(*steve*)

¡sǝpodᴉʇuɐ ǝɥʇ ɹɐǝɥd
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Post the information you have, and let's see! (we've all been waiting :))
 

(*steve*)

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Hmmm, it doesn't seem to want to give it to me.
 
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