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Author
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Topic: Strong 61000 Rectifier - Tripped Breaker, Strong Burning Smell
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Dave Macaulay
Film God
Posts: 2321
From: Toronto, Canada
Registered: Apr 2001
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posted 05-24-2014 09:20 AM
An "old school" tech told me a story of an owner calling in a panic saying "the rectifier is smoking, what should I do? His answer... get it an ashtray.
Do not use your rectifier until it's been fixed!!!
1 - this unit should not ever be "too hot to touch" particularly at 1kW. Something is terrifically wrong if it gets that hot. 2 - burning smell says... something is extremely overheating.
Open it up and see what overheated. It should be obvious: burned/charred wire insulation, blackened terminals, transformer or choke with the winding covers charred, or a burnt up contactor. (the "transformer" is actually a real transformer and a big choke, the choke part is closest to the output terminal strip.
If the transformer and choke aren't burned out, then it is repairable. All other parts are available.
Probably the bridge has one or more failed diodes. It can be opened up and they are replaceable. If the bridge fails so that high ripple is delivered to the capacitors and choke, the wires to the capacitors often melt. The choke is pretty much indestructible but can get really really hot in this condition. The fan and heatsink get clogged - sometimes solidly packed - with dust and grease (popcorn oil fumes) which causes the diodes to overheat, and the unit will get hot without the airflow. If it's been too hot to touch then there's a problem with the airflow! I keep a diode bridge assembly for quick repair, I'm sure a USA service company would have one for exchange if you don't feel like doing diode replacement (the internal cross wiring takes a powerful soldering iron and some care to avoid overheating the diodes while soldering). If you want mine it's for sale, I'll never need it again.
This rectifier is dead stupid and easily repairable, unless the transformer or choke is damaged (that's the end of it). A switching rectifier uses less power and has a much nicer power factor, but is non-repairable by 99% of techs let alone operators. I would fix and continue using the brute-force 61000 unit.
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