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Principle of Troubleshooting

Principle of Troubleshooting. Problem solving analysis Circuit faults Testing basic components. Troubleshooting methods Voltage measurement Amperage measurement Resistance measurement Substitution Bridging Heat Freezing Signal tracing & injection Component testers & test lamps

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Principle of Troubleshooting

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  1. Principle of Troubleshooting

  2. Problem solving analysis Circuit faults Testing basic components Troubleshooting methods Voltage measurement Amperage measurement Resistance measurement Substitution Bridging Heat Freezing Signal tracing & injection Component testers & test lamps Resoldering Adjusting Bypassing Topic

  3. Problem solving analysis • Servicing a device has 3 phases: 1) Situational analysis 2) Problem solving 3) Decision making

  4. 1) Situational analysis • Asking questions and observations as follows: • Discuss the defect with the owner or operator • Compare the problem with others from past experiences • Perhaps there is no problem at all, and it is an operating error • Identify the existing state of operation with the desired state • Make an overall observation of the situation, noting symptoms and relevant changes.

  5. 2) Problem solving • Get organized: • Describe the problem • Compare the problem situation with known operating conditions prior to the breakdown • Describe all known differences such as the symptoms, noises, and smells noticed when defect occurred • Compare the ‘what is’ with the ‘what is not’. Which components are okay and which are not, and to what degree are the components defective? • Analyze differences through testing by paying close attention to obscure and indirect relationships. For example, slight tolerance changes in components or physical color changes can signal causation.

  6. 3) Decision making • Examining various solutions or repair alternatives and selecting the best option • Consider all the advantages and disadvantages for each alternative along with contingency planning • Contingency planning: future changes in the overall system such as expected life, operating conditions and model changes.

  7. Circuit Faults • Basic causes of electrical or electronic breakdowns: 1. Heat • Increases the resistance of circuits • Increases the current • Causes the materials to expand, dry out, crack, blister, and wear down much more quickly 2. Moisture • Causes circuits to draw more current • Causes expansion, warping, quicker wear, and abnormal current flow (short circuits). 3. Dirt and contaminants (fumes, vapors, abrasives, soot, grease, and oils) • Causes devices to ‘clog’ or ‘gum’ up and operate abnormally until they finally break down

  8. Circuit Faults (cont..) 4. Abnormal or excessive movement • Vibrations and physical abuse can lead to breakdowns 5. Poor installation • Unqualified installer, careless and rushing installation • Failure to tighten a bolt • Failure to properly solder a wire connection 6. Manufacturing defect 7. Animals and rodents

  9. Circuit Faults (cont..) • 4 most common causes of circuit faults: 1. Short circuit • Draw more current because resistance decreases and results in voltage decreases. • Typical signs of short circuits are blown fuse, increased heat, low voltage, high amperage, smoke 2. Open circuit • Infinite resistance and zero current • Typical signs are infinite resistance, zero amperage, and completely inoperable device

  10. Circuit Faults (cont..) 3. Ground • Wires with poor insulation, pinched wires or misplaced components. • Typical signs are abnormal amperage, voltage and resistance reading, shocks, abnormal circuit performance, tripped ground-fault interrupters, and periodic blown fuses or circuit breakers 4. Mechanical fault • Too much friction, wear, abuse, or vibration • Broken belts, worn bearings, loose bolts, damaged chasis etc • Typical signs are noisy operation, abnormal operation, visual clues, and circuit failure

  11. Troubleshooting methods • Voltage measurements • Use voltmeter or oscilloscope, in parallel with the circuit • A zero voltage may identify an open circuit, a low voltage may indicate a short circuit. • Amperage measurements • Use ammeter or a ‘clamp-on’ ammeter in series with the circuit. • Indicates and locates common circuit faults such as short circuit, open circuit and grounds. • Resistance measurements • Use ohmmeter. Always shut off the power before measure resistance. • Locates short circuit, open circuit and grounds.

  12. Troubleshooting methods • Substitution • Replacing a suspected faulty component with a known good component. • Bridging • ‘jumps’ or placing a known good component across the suspected faulty component in a circuit. • Limited to open-circuited components. Bridging a short-circuited components may have no effect or may cause damage to the new component

  13. Troubleshooting methods • Heat • Usually by using a hot blower • Applied to a suspected ‘intermittent’ component. Thermally intermittent component breaks down under heat. • Freezing • Use of cold air from a fan or a chemical coolant. • Cools the suspected thermally intermittent component, thus temporarily restore the component to normal operation. • Signal tracing & injection • Most often used in servicing radio receivers. • A signal is injected into various points of a process (stage) in order to locate the specific inoperable stage.

  14. Troubleshooting methods • Component testers, test lamps • Instruments used to test the quality of a component • Megohmmeters, capacitor checkers, test lamps, transistor or diode testers, cathode-ray-tube (CRT) checkers, IC testers etc. • Re-soldering, adjusting and aligning. • Poor electric solder connection (cold solder joint) • Bypassing • To locate a suspected problem. • Requires unplugging one of several circuits

  15. Testing basic components • Most common defects of resistors are physical – cracking and charring. Excessive current and heat tend to increase the resistance. • Ohmmeter – measure continuity or resistance in resistors or other components. • Component having continuity has a resistance near zero • Component having no continuity has infinite resistance.

  16. Testing basic components • Continuity measurement: (fuse, wires, cables or cords) • A good fuse, wire, cable or cord will have continuity (0 ohm) • A blown fuse or broken wire, cable or cord will have no continuity (infinite resistance). • Gently bend the wire at various points especially along common faults such as near connections.

  17. Testing basic components • Continuity measurement: (switch) • A single pole, single throw switch should have continuity when closed and no continuity when opened. • Gently rock the switching mechanism to identify potential intermittent circuit faults.

  18. Testing basic components • Potentiometer • 1 lead of the ohmmeter placed on the center terminal, and the other lead on one of the end terminals. • The potentiometer should vary the resistance accordingly when turned. • Another way to test a potentiometer is to turn the potentiometer while it is in the circuit. If a scratchy, rough sound is heard in the speaker, the potentiometer needs cleaning or replacing.

  19. Testing basic components • Batteries • Voltage or amperage testing • An excellent battery should exceed its rated value. For example, a new dry cell rated at 1.5 V should measure 1.5 V to 1.6 V. Old and weak battery will read less than 1.5 V

  20. Testing basic components • Speakers • Rattles and heavy vibration are often signs of a defective speaker. • Visually inspect for cracks, dirt, and other faults. • Substitution is the best testing technique. Replace with a speaker that have the same impedance and power ratings.

  21. Testing basic components • Speakers (cont..) • Defective due to a bad voice coil, connection: gently pressing on the speaker cone may operate the speaker. • Place an ohmmeter across the voice coil terminal • Listen and watch for a small ‘pop’ sound and movement of the speaker cone. A defective speaker will show no movement or popping sound.

  22. Testing basic components • Speakers (cont..) • Phasing 2 or more speakers: • Place the ohmmeter on the voice coil terminal and note whether the cone moves in or out. Reversing the polarity will reverse the movement. Mark the positive side of each cone when it is in the out position. Then connect each speaker to the audio amplifier while observing the correct polarity.

  23. Testing basic components • Capacitors • Techniques to test capacitors: • Resistance measurement (ohmmeter) • Make sure the capacitor has discharged • Place the ohmmeter on a high scale such as 10,000 ohm • Place the leads of the ohmmeter across the leads of capacitor • The needle should deflect upward and then slowly drop back down to near zero • Failure to deflect : open capacitor • Failure to drop down: short circuited capacitor • Capacitance measurement (capacitor checker) • To check capacitance, leakage and opens.

  24. Testing basic components • Capacitors • Techniques to test capacitors: • Spark test • Momentarily (1 sec) connect the capacitor across the voltage source. Make sure the voltage does not exceed the voltage rating specified on the capacitor. • Short its terminals together using a screwdriver or a similar device with an isolating handle. • A good capacitor will show a spark

  25. Testing basic components • Capacitors • Techniques to test capacitors: • Bridging • Suspected defective capacitor is bridged (jumped) with a known good capacitor within +10% of the rated value. • Substitution • Replaced with a capacitor of the same rating/specifications

  26. Inductor It can be tested using meter ohm analog, meter ohm digital and RCL meter

  27. Fuse Use ohm meter for testing Good fuse: reading must be between 0 – 10 ohm Broken fuse: reading infiniti

  28. Diode Use meter ohm

  29. Transistor transistor is two back-to-back diodes in one package as shown. The letters C, B, E stand for COLLECTOR, BASE, EMITTER which are the names of the three leads which come out of a transistor.

  30. Transistor (cont) Assuming you know if the transistor is NPN or PNP, and assuming you know where B, C, and E are, then just test the B-C junction and the B-E junction as if they were standard diodes. if one of those junctions is a "bad diode", then the transistor is bad. Also, check the resistance from C to E using a higher Ohms scale. If the transistor is good, you should get an open-circuit reading from collector to emitter.

  31. Transistors (cont) USING METER TO SEPARATE NPN FROM PNP If you have a transistor but you don't know if it is NPN or PNP, then you can find out which it is using Ohm-meter. Assuming C, B, and E are known on the transistor, do the following: - Connect the positive lead of your Ohm-meter to the base. - Touch the other lead of your meter to the collector. If you get a reading, the transistor is NPN. - To verify, move the lead from the collector to the emitter and you should still get a reading. If your meter reads open-circuit, then connect the negative lead to the base and touch the positive lead to the collector. If you get a reading, then the transistor is PNP. Verify by measuring from base to emitter.

  32. Thank you

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