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#1
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I inadvertently powered up with battery reversed polarity. Seems all
instruments except Dittel FSG 2T survived. Anyone have experience with this? US repair station?? SZ |
#2
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On Apr 15, 7:45*am, "Sam Zimmerman" wrote:
I inadvertently powered up with battery reversed polarity. Seems all instruments except Dittel FSG 2T survived. Anyone have experience with this? US repair station?? *SZ I did the same thing on the LS-4 I sold to you years ago. There was a fuse in the Dittel radio that saved it. The repairman changed the fuse and all was ok. Ed Gaddy |
#3
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![]() The repairman changed the fuse and all was ok. Some radios have a thermal fuse on the side. It just has to be pushed and the radio works again. At least some Becker types have this. Regards, Erik. |
#4
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The MicroAire radios have an internal "pico" fuse that protects the
unit from reversed power. Ask me how I know ;-) Maybe the Becker has the same thing. A pico fuse is about the side of a 1/8w resistor (grain of rice) and is soldered inside the unit. It is not considered user repairable/ replaceable. While I have been able to replace the fuse, it isn't a task for the uninitiated without a good small wattage, small grounded tip, soldering iron. Too much heat and you can lift a trace or scorch the board. Too big of a soldering iron tip and you might unsolder more than you intend. A bit of a static spark and the device goes poof. Sorry to scare anyone but you don't want to toast a very nice radio. |
#5
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On Apr 15, 5:14*pm, ContestID67 wrote:
The MicroAire radios have an internal "pico" fuse that protects the unit from reversed power. *Ask me how I know ;-) *Maybe the Becker has the same thing. A pico fuse is about the side of a 1/8w resistor (grain of rice) and is soldered inside the unit. *It is not considered user repairable/ replaceable. *While I have been able to replace the fuse, it isn't a task for the uninitiated without a good small wattage, small grounded tip, soldering iron. *Too much heat and you can lift a trace or scorch the board. *Too big of a soldering iron tip and you might unsolder more than you intend. *A bit of a static spark and the device goes poof. *Sorry to scare anyone but you don't want to toast a very nice radio. One time I saw a 1943 Buzzard-Master - someone hooked up the battery backwards and there was a giant flash from under the panel ! Maybe look under the panel for one of them old-style screw fuses and put a penny in there ? |
#6
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On Apr 15, 7:45*am, "Sam Zimmerman" wrote:
I inadvertently powered up with battery reversed polarity. Seems all instruments except Dittel FSG 2T survived. Anyone have experience with this? US repair station?? *SZ Dittel manual says it has an auto-reset fuse. See: http://www.wingsandwheels.com/FSG2T%...n%20manual.pdf Appendix A3 How long did you wait before you tried it again ? Its a thermal device which has to cool after being abused. On the bright side, it will be nice and quiet in the cockpit... Have fun in Perry, Best Regards, Dave |
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