posted August 20, 2015 11:32 PM
I can't give you any specifics...perhaps someone with your same projector can assist. There's no way of knowing without testing the circuitry where the source of the problem is located. Assuming you have the correct fuse in place...it could be a bad transformer... capacitor...rectifier... poor solder joint...etc. Check the circuit boards...see if any traces are burned or don't look right. Has this started all of a sudden? Were there any other symptoms occurring before the first fuse blew? Testing voltages with your multimeter can be helpful to see if something seems irregular.
-------------------- Janice
"I'm having a very good day!" Richard Dreyfuss - Let It Ride (1989).
I seem to recall some conversation that the Eiki 16mm machines had both speaker out and line out on their external jack, but you have to wire the plug just right to access the signal you need.
I'm a Super-8 guy of the Elmo-ish, persuasion, but I think just maybe your audio connection is accidentally overloading your amp because it's not hooked up as Eiki intended.
-------------------- All I ask is a wide screen and a projector to light her by...
Posts: 3216
From: The Projection Box
Registered: Nov 2006
posted August 24, 2015 10:38 AM
I would try to run it without lamp switched on for a start to help eliminate the high amp use areas. I would inspect closely the lamp connector to see if it has broken down inside somewhat. Also check you are using the correct fuse obviously.