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On Sat, 29 Mar 2014, Trevor Wilson wrote:
On 29/03/2014 10:32 AM, Trevor Wilson wrote: On 13/02/2014 7:57 PM, Sainthunter wrote: I recently bought a Denon 'Personal Component System/AM-FM Stereo Receiver DRA-F100' unit from a charity shop - sold for spares or repair. Apart from a tuner issue the main fault is that after a while in standby mode it switches off completely from standby as though the mains has been switched off/a power cut. Is there a back-up memory battery somewhere, I have tried leaving the unit powered up and switched on for at least 24 hours kidding myself that it will recharge the memory battery, if there is one? **I don't have the service manual for that model, but most machines of that vintage use a large, low leakage electrolytic cap of approximately 20,000uF @ 6.3Volts. It will likely be near the main microprocessor. **BTW: By "large", I mean in capacity. The physical size is likely to be approximately 20 ~ 25mm high and 15mm in diameter.It may also use a 'supercap', which could be in the range of 0.1F ~ 1F @ 5.5 Volts, but I doubt it. That's a good point. I remember the cartoons in hobby magazines about what a Farad capacitor would look like, usually the single unit delivered ont he back of a truck. If such large capacitors existed, they sure weren't at the hobby or consumer level forty years ago. I remember buying a 'computer grade" electrolytic, the size of a Coke can, 15,000uF at about 16V. Barely high enough voltage rating for my purposes, but it was what I could get surplus. Now you can get even higher capacitance electrolytics in a much smaller package. ANd yes, by physical size, you'd never grasp that those backup capacitors in more recent equipment had such large capacitance values. Michael |
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