Kenwood DVR-5070

My favorite stereo is a DVD recorder that... doesn't work with DVDs anymore, won't even open the tray.

But, the stereo parts are wonderful, so it does all my TV sound. A few days ago, it developed a buzz, which didn't affect any of the digital (like blue-ray) sound inputs, only the analog ones. Sounded like 120 Hz, so I checked the regulators for that bunch of op amps, and sure enough, a capacitor had bulged... an hour to disassemble, five minutes to replace the thing, and now it works fine again (except for the DVR parts)...

But, the capacitors I replaced were the OUTPUT filters on 7815/7915 regulators (hey, they're identical, and one failed; better do both while I'm here, or it's another couple of hours to get to them ever again).

How often do regulator output capacitors fail, and how likely is it to generate an audible buzz when they do? I'd have thought the regulator would reject 120 Hz and its harmonics pretty well even without those filters. The removed part that failed tests as open, not shorted.

Reply to
whit3rd
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I'd check other caps in the chain, before the regulator. Most common age-related failure is high z with no physical signs - just high ripple voltage, where there shouldn't be any.

If the input cap was high z, ripple would break through as the voltage dips below minimum reg values.

RL

Reply to
legg

The preregulated supply is, I now see, well-enough documented (a printed wiring image) that it's possible to look at ripple under bias; it takes a lot less than hours to get to the TOP surface of that board, so next time I get curious, I can check that out (but those input capacitors aren't ones that I can grab from my stock; instead of hours, it'd take a few days to order replacements). I did check the diodes, and of course transformers rarely fail.

The replaced items included one tested-faulty capacitor, and it sounds OK now.

Reply to
whit3rd

Suprised it wasn't 100 Hz, twice the mains frequency.

Reply to
Lucifer

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