Hello everybody,
As I have been working on fixing up an SDDS system (2000 series) for use in my screening room, I have noticed a failure mode of the DSP-61 boards now on two different processors.
On both units, after running for 10-30 minutes, I noticed a burning smell. One of the units displayed an error, but the other did not. Upon shutting them down and checking all boards with a thermal camera, both had a very hot (over 200 degrees F) IC on the DSP-61 board. The smell seemed to emanate from there. The specific IC location was different on both (IC91 on the first, and IC88 on the other), but the custom Sony chip model was the same. One unit had a reader connected, and the other was just powered up on the bench.
After letting them cool, both systems still boot up, but the previously hot ICs still run hot, albeit only 10-20 degrees hotter than the surrounding ones. The first board now has two dead audio channels (L and LC meters pegged). The second appears to behave normally on the panel, but I have not put audio through it yet.
Both units have recently recapped and tested power supplies.
I have four more units that were briefly tested to boot up, but I'm reluctant to swap boards until I'm reasonably certain I'm not doing something to fry them.
Anyone seen this failure mode before? Are the DSP-61s and/or these ICs just prone to burning up?
I'm relatively adept at hot air SMD rework, so I could always try swapping chips on two dead boards if I get really bored or desperate!
Thanks!
As I have been working on fixing up an SDDS system (2000 series) for use in my screening room, I have noticed a failure mode of the DSP-61 boards now on two different processors.
On both units, after running for 10-30 minutes, I noticed a burning smell. One of the units displayed an error, but the other did not. Upon shutting them down and checking all boards with a thermal camera, both had a very hot (over 200 degrees F) IC on the DSP-61 board. The smell seemed to emanate from there. The specific IC location was different on both (IC91 on the first, and IC88 on the other), but the custom Sony chip model was the same. One unit had a reader connected, and the other was just powered up on the bench.
After letting them cool, both systems still boot up, but the previously hot ICs still run hot, albeit only 10-20 degrees hotter than the surrounding ones. The first board now has two dead audio channels (L and LC meters pegged). The second appears to behave normally on the panel, but I have not put audio through it yet.
Both units have recently recapped and tested power supplies.
I have four more units that were briefly tested to boot up, but I'm reluctant to swap boards until I'm reasonably certain I'm not doing something to fry them.
Anyone seen this failure mode before? Are the DSP-61s and/or these ICs just prone to burning up?
I'm relatively adept at hot air SMD rework, so I could always try swapping chips on two dead boards if I get really bored or desperate!
Thanks!
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