Author
|
Topic: Elmo GS 1200 Motor won't run???
|
David Evans
Junior
Posts: 27
From: Cowichan Bay BC Canada
Registered: Oct 2005
|
posted August 01, 2006 11:18 PM
Hi
Recently acquired a GS-1200 - lovely machine, just has an odd fault:
Set it up, plugged it in, loaded film, good picture, good sound. Fine, except occasionally the main shutter motor would stop dead and the film would melt..... a few seconds later it would start running again if one hadn't hit the stop button by then.
Cleaned & lubricated bearings. No difference. Inspected main printed circuit board and found a dry joint on a relay connection. Corrected it. Motor ran fine for about an hour, then repeated the instantaneous stopping.
Then read the manual! Found the ESS switch was in ESS position, not Normal position. The manual says it should not have run at all in the ESS position unless external sync pulse signals are present. Switched the ESS switch to normal. The motor has since refused to run at all in any position of any switches.
Do any of you technical experts know this fault?
I checked the voltage across the motor. Both terminals are at approx 26 volts +ve with respect to chassis, and therefore there is no potential across the motor terminals, so naturally it doesn't run.
Do I need a replacement motor control board, I wonder? I see it is full of integrated circuits.
Does anyone have a service manual (including complete circuit) I could buy?
Thanks for any advice you can give.
Regards from sunny Canada!
David Evans
| IP: Logged
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
David Evans
Junior
Posts: 27
From: Cowichan Bay BC Canada
Registered: Oct 2005
|
posted August 15, 2006 11:10 AM
Hi All
Kevin, you are quite right, though I arrived at the same conclusion independently. Measurement showed that D308 appeared to be open circuit. I replaced it, together with R329 and R326, which had burned out. The motor ran for a few minutes, then stopped again. Measurement showed all three diodes to be OK. However, the connection on the board between D307 and D308 had gone open circuit (or intermittantly so, if you flexed the board). I paralleled the track with a separate wire, replaced R326 and R329 again and normal service appears to have been resumed. The original diode measures OK out of circuit, so I think the problem was the track all along. I hate PCBs with highish currents in them!
Thanks for your interest and advice.
Regards
David
| IP: Logged
|
|