Hi, I got a buzz-interference problem with a guitar amplifier. After realizing the buzz was 100 Hz and thus related to the AC power, I detected a failure of "one" of the caps of the diode bridge rectifier that powers the mother board (this mother board has a analog preamps and a DSP to make effects on the input guitar signal). See attached diagram. C7 is the dead cap, but ...
1. why two caps instead of just one?
2. THE MOST IMPORTANT QUESTION OF THIS THREAD: Is the polarization of C7 right? Shouldn't C7 be upside down instead?
3. The pin 2 goes also to the mother board. For what reason? Since this ACDC part will likely power the analog circuits of the mother board, why two different voltage levels?!?
Is somebody familiar with this simple ACDC schema?
Thanks a lot.
More INFO: C7 and C8 are both 1mF/35V and the pins A and B from the transformer are labeled as A=0V, B=30V.
1. why two caps instead of just one?
2. THE MOST IMPORTANT QUESTION OF THIS THREAD: Is the polarization of C7 right? Shouldn't C7 be upside down instead?
3. The pin 2 goes also to the mother board. For what reason? Since this ACDC part will likely power the analog circuits of the mother board, why two different voltage levels?!?
Is somebody familiar with this simple ACDC schema?
Thanks a lot.
More INFO: C7 and C8 are both 1mF/35V and the pins A and B from the transformer are labeled as A=0V, B=30V.
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