Heineken
20-01-2024, 07:35 PM
Another radio with intermittent sound output arrived at my desk. It was previously repaired in 2008 but not exactly in top quality.
14896
state of repairs 2008
Nevertheless it played fine for 5-20 minutes when it suddenly dropped silent. Different from a previous case regarding a USDM radio the main flex cable connectors where still looking good, so it had to be something different.
14893
trouble shooting
As soon as the audio went out, the voltage at the two main output amplifiers was checked and suspiciously low (3.9 V, should be ~10 V). This 10 V supply is generated by the Zener diode ZD807 but measured fine at the diode. As always in such cases, it's best to work backwards. After a bit of tracking and tracing, it became obvious that the 10 supply was fine but somehow did not reach the amplifiers that depend on it.
The reason was quite simple: A broken trace caused a disconnection on the way. After confirming it on an old board and adding a repair wire, the sound came back and was working stable again.
14894
an additional (yellow) repair wire
Besides the repair, the power supply PCB had its leaking capacitors exchanged, the volume knob fastened and a flex cable replaced that didn't look very good any more:
14895
leaking capacitors on the power PCB
14897
a fixed knob
14898
a damaged flex cable
14899
a cleaned PCB with tracks covered in solder
14900.. backside
14901final result with all parts re-installed
14902final checks
BTW, the really interesting part was that the radio had been to a professional repair shop before and couldn't be fixed. They stated:
"The unit was carefully disassembled and and each part checked according to schematics. It needs to be retuned in an unrepaired state. The audio processor was checked and considered defective. After a long search we found out that it's no longer available."
This raises a lot of questions since the NSX radio doesn't have an audio processor and schematics haven't surfaced anywhere yet. In addition, everything that could be considered a processor in this radio is Alpine proprietary and was never freely available. My guess is, they opened it, couldn't find the issue and simply returned it charging their standard fee ..
PS: Circuit information regarding the 10 V supply has been added to the Radio Repair III page (http://www.nsxcb.co.uk/entry.php?2785-Radio-Head-Unit-Repair-III).
14896
state of repairs 2008
Nevertheless it played fine for 5-20 minutes when it suddenly dropped silent. Different from a previous case regarding a USDM radio the main flex cable connectors where still looking good, so it had to be something different.
14893
trouble shooting
As soon as the audio went out, the voltage at the two main output amplifiers was checked and suspiciously low (3.9 V, should be ~10 V). This 10 V supply is generated by the Zener diode ZD807 but measured fine at the diode. As always in such cases, it's best to work backwards. After a bit of tracking and tracing, it became obvious that the 10 supply was fine but somehow did not reach the amplifiers that depend on it.
The reason was quite simple: A broken trace caused a disconnection on the way. After confirming it on an old board and adding a repair wire, the sound came back and was working stable again.
14894
an additional (yellow) repair wire
Besides the repair, the power supply PCB had its leaking capacitors exchanged, the volume knob fastened and a flex cable replaced that didn't look very good any more:
14895
leaking capacitors on the power PCB
14897
a fixed knob
14898
a damaged flex cable
14899
a cleaned PCB with tracks covered in solder
14900.. backside
14901final result with all parts re-installed
14902final checks
BTW, the really interesting part was that the radio had been to a professional repair shop before and couldn't be fixed. They stated:
"The unit was carefully disassembled and and each part checked according to schematics. It needs to be retuned in an unrepaired state. The audio processor was checked and considered defective. After a long search we found out that it's no longer available."
This raises a lot of questions since the NSX radio doesn't have an audio processor and schematics haven't surfaced anywhere yet. In addition, everything that could be considered a processor in this radio is Alpine proprietary and was never freely available. My guess is, they opened it, couldn't find the issue and simply returned it charging their standard fee ..
PS: Circuit information regarding the 10 V supply has been added to the Radio Repair III page (http://www.nsxcb.co.uk/entry.php?2785-Radio-Head-Unit-Repair-III).