I want to try something new. Something more live. So I’m running a 3-part live workshop that takes us on… A Time Travel Through Vintage Electronics. We’ll rewind the clock, dive into the tech of the times… (and study the very history of how things were broken and repaired has evolved) From the 1950s all the way to 2020s. It's still just an idea. The dates and times are to be confirmed. But if you're reading this, then the workshop hasn't yet taken place. So if you're interested and don't want to miss out, you can sign up here: menditmarkk.ck.page/6e8fbd9521
Excellent video, I love the ‘Hal 9000’ quote at the end. I’ve been repairing vintage and modern electronics for a long time now and I find your videos extremely informative.
While I enjoy a successful repair as much as anyone else, what I most enjoy is the process of trying to find the fault in the first place. In that regard, this video did not disappoint.
You need repaired 2000 gear, you can have it all ! Radio's, HD HDD recorders, DVD, come and take some trash if you need it, i did repair it all, not needed by anyone, so come and take them please !
That receiver may be repairable. The RESET MCU line is two-way. It can be a watch-dog timer output if the MCU is stuck in a loop. According to the MCU TMP87CM71 datasheet section 1.11 "Reset circuit", in watch-dog activation mode the RESET line can be a pulsed output with a period of 2^20 / Fc [s] = 131ms at Fc = 8Mhz. In this unit the crystal gives Fc = 4MHz. Thus the watch-dog output period here is 262ms which gives 3.8146 Hz, which is virtually exactly what you are seeing at 9:32. Therefore the MCU may be stuck, glitched. This can be a classic case of supercap holding up the stuck MCU. I recommend you gently fully discharge the memory supercap which seems to be C401. Don't bother with reset procedures, the supercap is THE reset procedure. Simply pressing power a few times is NOT the official reset procedure. And check for shorted outputs. That (protection mode) and other reasons may also be why the MCU does not come up. Please keep trying. It is highly probable that the unit can be fixed. It is highly unlikely that the MCU is bad. Good luck. Let me know if I can be of further assistance. [ Edit ] One more thing: Please be aware that for complete grounding often the complete back panel must be attached or jumper wires connected to fully connect all grounds. Failure to do so can often lead one down the wrong path. Perhaps not in this unit, but still good practice.
@@marcseclecticstuff9497 Me neither. But something was odd. There was nothing else connected to that reset line. I don't know why I took the time, but I was just very suspicious. I have never seen that or at least bothered to look it up before. I should look closely when examining datasheets. Likely more of them do that. Hope it helps. Happy listening ... yet ... ?
Thanks Tim. I dig a little bit deeper and as far as I understood according to the TMP87CM71F datasheet (1.10) the watchdog behavior must be initialized after reset. So my guess is a "Adress Trap Reset" caused by degraded rom (for example cant find qualified reset vector) and matches the timing diagram. There is also a OTP replacement part (TMP87PP71F) but without firmware and special programmer (example: Xeltek ~1k$) I think is hopeless.
I have this excat denon amp from over 20 years ago it's my baby I actually cleaned it out recently and it's still alive after all this time I'm sad to see this one has died this was my first ever Amp it has a special place in my heart ♥ After watching this video I pray it's got many more yrs to live
Excellent!. Had I seen your vids when I was 15 or 16 I would have surely chosen a different career ... still find it a bit of a 'Magicians apprentice' job. Went into Mainframe software development and OS instead but now (over 70) the old hardware still calls to me. Well done!
Amazing, I got a Denon AVR receiver just last week with the exact same issue -- only the standby light on, no other display and no reaction from the power switch or any other switches no matter what -- AND all of the output voltages were there so it acted like it was on. I came to the same conclusion -- dead CPU. I learned a lot in the troubleshooting though, and also learned never to bother with a Denon showing only a standby light again. Thanks for the video, now at least I have some confirmation I wasn't way off base!
Back in the 80s, when these computer controlled audio receivers became popular, we had a lot of success "discharging" the MOSFET inputs by power off, connecting a jumper to ground and swiping it across all the legs of the MCU. Not exactly sure, really didn't care since it worked, this worked, and I hadn't thought of it in 30 years. It might be worth a try, if you haven't trashed the Denon yet. I enjoy watching you work. I've been away from component level repair for more than 20 years, having gotten into IT when I saw the repair business disappearing, with "swap while in warrantee, and trash when out" manufacturer philosophy. Thanks for sharing.
This is why I steer clear of all Denon receivers. I've seen way too many broken ones and I'm not a skilled enough technician to keep them alive. Thanks for sharing this video Mark!
I have a Denon receiver that I bought about 10 years ago as a 'demo' unit. Was the last one on the shelf at the store, it had been a powered display unit for awhile. It's been a great unit, sound quality is fantastic, the 5 channels inside are separate. Only thing I've had to do once in awhile is take the remote apart and clean the button pads, especially for the volume up/down etc. But since it's going to be over 10 years old soon, if it ever dies, I'll chuck it. Was on sale at a pretty good discount since it was 'open box'.
I quit buying Denon products many years ago when they were known as a somewhat "high end" brand and all I seemed to have was bad luck with them. Too many better options out there to take the risk in my opinion.
Excellent work. The comment, "That's weird?" .........is something I have muttered a hundred times when trying to debug a circuit. I know the unit is old, but to be unable to fix a receiver because of software in a discontinued chip is very disappointing. That software/chip is just an unnecessary (control) wart in the circuitry: I am old school....all you need is: input jacks, selector switches, preamp, amp, speaker jacks. Leave the software to iPads.
Ho letto i messaggi di alcuni utenti su queste discussioni per il raggiungimento della riparazione finale, per far tornare in vita l'apparecchio. E sono sempre più convinto che 40anni fà ho fatto la scelta giusta, per aver deciso di studiare l'elettronica. Il mio indirizzo di studio era radio e tv. Grazie a Mark e a TUTTI QUANTI VOI, per aver conosciuto anche soltanto leggendo, le vostre assolute grandi capacità di arrivare fino in fondo alla riparazione. Mark è assolutamente eccezionale nel riparare di tutto, ma leggo con mia grande gioia che ci sono altrettanti Mark a cui poter tranquillamente affidare in riparazione i propri gioelli elettronici. GRAZIE A TUTTI VOI ❤
Great video - I worked in a Hifi shop at weekends 30 years ago when I became interested in electronics and building amps and active crossovers. I was horrified at the amount of nasty cheap components in the signal path - stuff I would never put in my own builds - carbon film resistors in the signal path - even in the NFB in amps costing a months wages! Marketing, Gimmickry, proprietary protectionism and planned obsolescence, not much has changed.
I have a Denon 35 watt am fm receiver I bought in the eighties. It's class A and can be cranked up to maximum volume with little distortion. Great video on this one Mark............
I have a similar era Denon receiver, an AVR 2500 that I bought new in 1996 or so. I've used it heavily and it's my favorite receiver ever. It has the ability to make any set of speakers you hook up to it sound fantastic. It ran a pair of Klipsch Chorus IIs for about a decade, it lived through 8 years on a modified sine wave power inverter in my cabin, now it runs a sub/satellite Bose speaker system in my office. It was my 2nd "big" audio purchase ever and I hope it lives another 27 years. Only quirk it has is sometimes the buttons on the unit will act like you pressed a totally different button.
Iam so glad your Channel came up on my TH-cam. It was great to see you go through diagnosing the fault .I Have Subscribed and will be checking some other videos of yours, Great work Mark.
Absolutely fascinating. I detest the way we have to throw away stuff now. I recently repaired my 1994 akai integrated amp. Cost 17p for a couple of capacitors and resistors . Sadly went again 6 months later so beyond my skill to fix. I then wnet for a marantz costing over a grand. Sadly I know some day maybe ten years from now something will go and it will be another bin job. It is crazy. Thanks for the video, I am subscribing.
You are one of the best electronic repair channel on TH-cam. I definitely learned more about electronics with you than in school. Thank you for sharing your passion with us.
I don’t know how I got here. I have no idea what pins and transistors are advocating signal and voltage drop is. But I find it very relaxing and helping fall asleep. Typing is making me sleepy too
well tried I forgotten a lot I learned since my stroke so admire you and being a radio ham i need to repair things but often i just leave them , thanks for the video
Have repaired thousand of thousands of Denon Hi-Fi between late 80's to early 2000. Do even have a DRA-275 for my pc.. :P It's was a very very reliable receiver. Most common thing was blown inputs (due to user connecting/disconnecting stuff with all stuff turned on) or a cooked mains transformer because of stacking things on top and drive it hard. The transformer has a temp fuse you can locate and wiggle out and replace with some handywork. Your thing is rare and seems more of just get the remote and turn it on or manual reset by first discharge all caps completely then use a solderwick and ground all legs on the mc by drag the grounded wick over the legs of the mc. Feel free to holler if you need Denon tips.
If I still may suggest, provided it is not yet scrapped, I would suggest you to check main Vcc pins on MCU on an (fast DSO) scope during power on. If some capacitor on power rail is dead, which I can imagine there may well be some, the inrush current to MCU will cause a voltage drop, simply causing MCU to reset. All I am saying this could be as simple as power supply issue.
I'm surprised he didn't notice or mention the multiple, easily visible puddles in the dust at the beginning of the video, where things have obviously gotten wet at some point. I'm betting a lot of the caps have leaked onto the board and are now effectively nothing more than resistors to the circuit
I’ve fixed more older inoperative electronics with recapping then anything. They loose their value with age and they short other components when they leak.
Maybe not the inrush current, however you can get shorts, oscillating power regulators, etc. Electrolytic caps tend to die with age, as Fireship1 posted earlier.
I love your British expressions. Dry solder joint. Across the pond we call it a Cold solder joint. It's still dry but it's cold. And it didn't get wet with molten solder lately. I've gone through some of these cold solder joint parts before. Sometimes you can't just re-solder them. You have to remove them. You have to clean the leads. Scrape them down. Then reinstall. Then re-solder. Otherwise you might get some crappy connections that don't seem to be dry or cold. But they are insulated! They have insulated themselves. That's how they got that way. It's a metallurgy phenomena of, nonidentical metals being connected with each other. And their molecules begin to fight each other. And they start to out gas a fine white film. To insulate itself. And that's why you need to physically clean and scrape down those leads. For a truly good solid electrical connection that will last for decades, to come. You see…… You are only being tasked. With fixing a cheap old stereo receiver. It's a bit different. When you are trying to restore, recover, refurbish, rebirth a, 1978, $85,000, custom-built for NBC-TV News, in Washington, DC. A British Rupert Neve 36 input, custom console. That has to work like new again. And continue on for an additional 20 years. Working like new again. I've done it to that one and others. And it is no easy short-term chore. Way beyond fixing a cheap consumer stereo. And amazed at your own lack of knowledge. For a Brit? My goodness man! Have you lost all your self-respect?! Or is this all blasphemy? And by the way how is your Queen? Is she still dead? Good. She should stay that way. Now her,, inbred son is ready to destroy the monarchy. And then to dump, Queen Camilla Bowles. For a younger hottie! Yeah baby! It's good to be the King. And off with her head! And where's Princess Diana? Is she also still dead? Good! Now neither will know who's pussy I shall grab! As if you are King. They let you do it. And I'm sure he can, hardly wait. I mean just because he's already 74 doesn't mean anything! Just ask brother Andrew. He likes them really young. And enslaved. Don't ask me why? He was a friend of Jeffrey Epstein. Who was murdered in jail by the Trump/Rudy/Bannon Mafia. Where they all wanted to be the Fixer. And they fixed Jeffrey just fine. And now his 16-year-old girlfriend has nobody to help her. And she was the good-looking one. As it wasn't, Jeffrey. He looked like a Jewish nerd. Because he was. And liked young underage girls. Go figure with these schmuck's? Who wants a young girl? They don't know anything. They don't know what they want or how they want it? I like women who know such things and how to do them. Not the stupid young ones you have to teach everything to. What the hell is wrong with those boys in their 40s and 50s and 60s? There little happy but he doesn't get hard over people their own age anymore? I guess not? I think older women with gray hair are very sexy. WOW! And they know what they want. And they can articulate that. So always a good ride for both. And experienced boy man only wants inexperienced little girls? What kind of maturity is that? It's at least between the 6th and 7th grade girls? And not younger than 12. In Texas. Before you can rape them. They have to be at least 12. According to Texan law! Which will be enforced! Because if you rape a little girl earlier than 12? You are in big trouble buddy! Of course it will also be your child. And you do not have to allow for her to have an abortion. Otherwise you can have her parents and the doctor arrested and thrown in jail for 20 years. Which is the perfectly moral thing to do. To an immoral act of abortion due to rape. Why? It's a miracle! If she doesn't want that baby? We will take it! And raise it with Jesus. And so she will have the next, immaculate conception. That Donnie won the election. The election conception. And all of the liberal Democrats aborted him! Which they should die for! Or at least go to jail for the rest of their lives! But we don't want to pay for them! So they will have to grow their own food in jail. Or they can have the outdated dog food. As it is still delicious and nutritious and dogs love it. They never complain. YOU SHOULDN'T EITHER! This then would all work out well. In the Soviet Union. Pre-apocalypse. RemyRAD
Age-wise, according to HiFi Wiki, the manufacturing years for that Denon receiver was from 1996 - '98. I have a 'DRA 425-R' receiver that's older, but still runs fine. Maybe one aspect that has kept it in shape was using a power-strip as a power-on/power-off switch; as I am suspect of push-button on/off switch's lifespan.
Excellent channel on the topic of repairing electronics, on par with NorthridgeFix, which is based exclusively on microsoldering. Mark seems to be much more versatile and modest than NorthridgeFix guy. At the same time Mark shows his work very entertaininly...
Every identifiable date code in that is from 1996. That’s way before the transition to lead-free. But cracked joints (not “dry joints” - dry joints are a specific type of soldering error, which does not include thermal cycling induced fracture) happen to thermally cycled joints with leaded solder.
i picked up the same reciever about 9 years ago for 30$cad at a yard sale. It's been my bedroom radio for quite some time. I always thought there was more on the inside. So far i been lucky no issues yet
Great to see, hopefully further advice from comments will see this working. I used to work at Marshall Amplification in test & service (88-93), then Alpine Car Audio (93-97), before the days of in-circuit firmware upgrades so regularly replaced similar controllers.
Yes when AV Receivers and the like are controlled by a Microprocessor it's a ticking bomb. Onkyo AV receivers are also notorious with similar problem in their Syscon boards. With this Denon you may succeed in fidling for the On/Off control to power up but other function like source selection, etc. may not work either so yeah it's parts out unit then. I love watching videos on this channel which give good information. Mark is really patient at work and always smile.
Can't win them all. But this video is a great example of investigating and finding the source of the problem. I have a Denon DRA-325R from 1989. Was given to me. Lightly used in an office (they guy listened to AM radio through some fairly expensive speakers).. I got it some years ago and just started using it again when my NAD C368 failed. Died in 3 years yet the old Denon still works. Go figure!
My compliments for your endurance anf skills. A pitty to waste a Denon. I still have an AVR 1000 pro logic recoevet with excellent audio quality. Build around 1992 and still going strong. Greetz from 🇳🇱
I repaired a similar vintage receiver the other week. What was odd is that the reset was not clean / fast enough with the "dim lamp" in series with the mains and the micro failed to start. As soon as I went back to straight mains the unit it worked fine. It had me flummoxed for a minute!
What a shame !! I love your channel-and your good and cheery humour,I’ve watched you successfully fix quite a number of products-but sadly ‘you can’t win ‘em all’ !!
Man, I feel your pain, I have spent thousands of hours trying to fix this stuff only to realise you can’t. It is so demoralizing when you realise you can buy an alternative for €20., its such a shame but its just how it goes, time marches on and sometimes it is just not worth the effort. But, still a challenge. And that’s the fun of it.
This is exactly why most of todays cars wont be repairable in 20 years time, full of un-serviceable obsolete electronics, that will cost more to fix than what the car is worth!
@@NOWThatsRichy So true, too much electronics nowadays. Best we can do is keep the older ones on the road and not support and buy the new crap. Bad direction the world is going in.
I had to repair my 1987 DENON DCD-900 CD player, due to it skipping. Here I had to invest about 6 drops of electric shaver oil, to fix the problem. The mechanical movement was somewhat inhibited, due to the partially hardening of the old old lubricant. I just fixed my 15 year old coffee maker about 1/2 an hour ago. It had a blown thermal fuse. Other than that, after a few repairs over the years, my 2004 stainless steel microwave oven is still up and going. I purchased it for about $45, due to it being a display model, or so they said. In truth, only half the keyboard worked, so I fixed that by simply cleaning the keyboard electrical contacts. At one point about 5 years ago, with just a couple of drops of glue, I repaired the turntable motor, in which there was slipping occurring between the spinning center donut-magnet, and the gear that sits inside it. Also at another time there were the required replacements of the door micro-switches and the main fuse. These replacement parts were obtained from someone else's oven that they had tossed out to the curb for disposal. And I also fixed my 2009 SAMSUNG TV, which I am watching this video on today. I had to replace one bulging electrolytic capacitor in the power supply section. Then at one point my computer monitor brick power supply became intermittent. It was a bad soldering joint on the transformer, where one wire was poorly soldered to one of the multiple transformer posts. So it was not even a PCB soldering problem. Other than that, my old backup computers PSU was causing a boot looping problem. I replaced the bad PSU electrolytic caps, and that fixed the boot up problem, and it cost about $9.50 for the parts. So all of these items are still up and going, and the repair costs were less than $20 overall. I love saving money.
Dear Mark. Many thanks for your efforts. However, in my experience, the only good Denon is a doorstop!!!!! The A.V. amps are utterly unserviceable. Also no ready backup. I commend you for trying on this "basic" one. Better luck next time. Regards Allan. Commiserations.
Yes. My experience with 2 Denon AVR is the typical processor overheat and needs reballing due to no connections. Dislike Denons due to known issues for which repair parts are no longer available.
Hey Mark, I have one of the same model that is also dead. I hope you can solve this. I look forward to seeing your second episode. I get motivation from your smile. Go ahead.
That pulse looks quite digital (timing etc.). So I expect the CPU still runs fine. It's probably the program running on the MCU trying to initialize some peripheral, then gets stuck waiting for it to respond. The watchdog unit then attempts to reset the MCU hoping that the next boot will be successful. Maybe there is some i2c bus you can monitor. But it's a lot of work :)
I had a Denon receiver around that time. It didn't have an issue removing from standby mode into playing mode. Mine also had an enhanced bass button near bottom right next to the variable loudness. It worked very well, I added a graphic equalizer to it using the first cassette player input which gave more control and doubled the volume.
I own a DRA 45 that was dead after power switch cycle! The only repair shop wanted more in a bench check charge than what the receiver was worth ! I decided to at least try resetting board connections , and clean internal power switch ! The receiver powered on with no other apparent issues !😁
Just love the time lapse repair thanks to editing. That was some good troubleshooting, your eyes are doing better than mine. Would have a difficult time counting the leads on that controller, yikes.
The microcontroller is reprogrammable, and still available. The Denon allows for DFU ( direct firmware update ) using a DOS/Windows program to perform the first update. It is an older Denon ( being 20 years old indeed ) which doesn't support many modern features that are needed for HDTV's ... but it is a pity that it's for the bin.
I had this exact amplifier, I'm fairly sure from memory that you need it's remote control to bring it out of standby and that was the only way you could do it. I assume the processor is generating it's own reset cycle. Thanks for the excellent continue, reminds me of my TV and audio repair days.
Nice to see the use of an Aldi screwdriver, I must have missed when that was for sale! I have a Lidl one, branded 'Parkside' - bloody brilliant, has survived use and abuse over several years. Lithium Battery is getting a bit weak now, but only to be expected after all this use. As a hobby user, I wouldn't spend the money on 'De Wilt - sic' etc...
I can not stop watching your videos! I have no words! Just brilliant! Perfect! I am not sure about your background. Priest? School teacher? Bilioner hobbiest? All together?
I have a question for you Mark about your favorite brand, Denon! I bought a Denon AVR-2802 new about the year 2000. Used it for a couple of months, and then stored it away for about 24 years. Pulled it out the other day, and it does turn on. Just doesn't make any sound through speakers. The headphone function works marginally but pretty low. It's not muted, not on the wrong input, working speakers and connection. It even outputs a signal through rec out to a sub with a cd player connected to it. I imagine other functions work short of playing through speakers. What do you think from afar?
I knew it would be a micom failure. It's the only thing that will stop my shop from fixing one of these too. Micom failures are rare and so disappointing when they're encountered.
I always put these machines on the floor outside and give them a good blasting with the hosepipe, then leave them to dry, they look like new afterwards. They are always fixable afterwards :)
Hi Mark, Thanks for sharing your great knowledge with us! I've recently bought Denon PMA SX11 (online order from Japan) and the day I received (last week) , I powered it on through my existing step-down transformer which says 500Wt but continuous 400 wt. The moment I tried to turn on my unit, it started blinking (power button blinking green) and clicking but not turning it into solid green. I asked for help from my supplier who told me use 5000watt transformer which I ordered through amazon. Now, when I connected it through the new transformer which can handle up 5000watt (continuous 4500watt) , the power button is not green but it stays red for a while without any clicking noise and then goes off afer a while. I was so excited when I got it and now I am worried thinking to send back to Japan for repairing. Any advise so that it can be seen and resolved the issue in the UK? Would appreciate your advice! Thank you so much!
Soooo much screws, you definitely need a DeWalt DCF680. I enjoy your videos very much. I am a hobbyist from Vienna Austria. I try my best an learn from you. Rock on and best regards.
I repair electronic equipment for a hobby (self taught) and I usually get everything working, but when I start to open some device to repair, I always dread that an unobtainable IC has failed in it. For example, in this video, where you will have to bin the Denon. That's why I enjoy working on pre-IC equipment like old Dansette record players, where the parts are still easily available.
I never thought I'd feel sad about the demise of old tech but in this case I do. Disposable tech feels like such a waste of valuable resources. Such a shame, but nice try Mark, great video and onto the next project.
"That eighty pin rectangular bastard has all the answers" 🤣 Seriously though, that PCB is bloody awful with all those jumper links and pots and I/O sockets soldered directly to the board, though the PSU and heatsink do appear to be adequately rated. Good work, thanks for the video.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with any of those supposed shortcomings. That’s all perfectly normal for consumer AV gear: jumper links cost less than a double-sided board, and it’s perfectly normal to solder PCB-mount connectors and pots to a PCB.
@Antonio Tejada Soft soldered joints should not be relied on for mechanical strength and jumper links introduce unreliability because there are more soldered joints. As someone who worked in aerospace electronics for 20+ years and designed and built dozens of projects I consider myself to be in a position to speak from experience. The brand Naim is commercial and their products do not have connectors mounted directly on and soldered to the PCB.
I use car polish compound on the display screen. Fix almost any scratch. Also, you can use wetsand and try to cut down the scratch as much as you can and repolish the surface with again car polish compound. Thanks me later.
That’s why I went to industrial electronics and mechanical and heavy equipment not a good business model repairing consumer electronics and business cost rise as consumers equipment drops in price tv so cheap many send to ewaste stations
I've noticed on the intro that there are video clips that do not appear in Mark's youtube channel, I'm sure there is a reason why....? Edit: NO NOT THROW AWAY!! A couple of Denon DRA-275RD's are listed on ebay. *"I bought a donor Denon DRA-275RD - My diagnosis assumptions were correct!!"*
I have had nothing but bad luck with Denon receivers. I purchased three of them over the years. I would never purchase another one. the last receiver I purchased was a Yamaha and that has worked perfectly for years now.
If the micro is watchdogging and cycling the reset, it maybe because an external signal or condition is not there, i.e. comms to the RDS module, etc at powerup or even power rail voltage monitoring. I've dealt with products that won't power up (and stay in standby) because of simple things like it can't detect a working fan! So worth checking some of those other inputs to the micro and comms (check for responses to outbound transmissions to external peripherals and modules). Did you check for a stuck switch on the front panel?
I happen to have a DRA335R unit. very similar to this model. My problem with it is the pull out knob for the variable loudness has a nasty crackle to it and it will cut out randomly. I have tried to rotate the knob in every position pushing and pulling etc to try and clear the static (carbon build up?) tried a quality electronic spray from the front panel... still exists... do you happen to have any bloody hell recommendations on cleaning that up OR replacing if the part is even out there anymore... might you have a part number? Your a brain child repairman and amazing one at that.
Hi Mark I stumbled on your videos, I must admit I really enjoy the videos, how you're repairing equipment. Very impressed with your test gear. Keep up the good work. One day I may need you to fix some of equipment. Brian
quite an unusual failure -makes me wonder if that 6v regulator went dry jointed on its ground pin first so input voltage got sent straight to the output pin as unregulated and blew the micro -but then the micro wants a 5v supply not 6v unless its going through a diode for a memory backup cap then 6v is about right-now i want to find a schematic to check my guess !
I had wondered about the new lead-less solder, is the new stuff any better? Frankly I that they went to far about going lead-less. So far as the receiver? another black weightless box with tiny print or labeling. Give me a Pioneersx650 or Kenwood KR6030.
I am planning to do a full service on our Denon PMA-450. It is still working OK and luckily it has not got any microprocessor. There are 4 op amps NJM5534DD, which are now discontinued but still available. Are these worth upgrading to something better?
I want to try something new. Something more live.
So I’m running a 3-part live workshop that takes us on…
A Time Travel Through Vintage Electronics.
We’ll rewind the clock, dive into the tech of the times…
(and study the very history of how things were broken and repaired has evolved)
From the 1950s all the way to 2020s.
It's still just an idea. The dates and times are to be confirmed.
But if you're reading this, then the workshop hasn't yet taken place.
So if you're interested and don't want to miss out, you can sign up here:
menditmarkk.ck.page/6e8fbd9521
Excellent video, I love the ‘Hal 9000’ quote at the end. I’ve been repairing vintage and modern electronics for a long time now and I find your videos extremely informative.
While I enjoy a successful repair as much as anyone else, what I most enjoy is the process of trying to find the fault in the first place. In that regard, this video did not disappoint.
You need repaired 2000 gear, you can have it all !
Radio's, HD HDD recorders, DVD, come and take some trash if you need it, i did repair it all, not needed by anyone, so come and take them please !
Totally agree! I don't know why, but finding the root cause, regardless if it's repairable or not, is very rewarding.
Fully agree. It's great to see some old school diagnostics AND explaining what is going on for a semi noob like myself. Thank you.
It's really the only interesting part for me. And I did a few thousand of them between 1986 and 2000.
That ending with the red led dimming, definitely like the death of the Terminator in the first film!
That's exactly what I thought
It was cool!!!
Best tech repair channel on the tube.
Cutting your losses with a smile, thats a great attitude. Thanks for uploading the dead ends too.
This guy..and theres a guy who cooks pies on here.both i think are from the same place and both are amazingly happy all the time..must be idilic
@@luminousfractal420 I know the channel you mean, Is it 'Bald Foodie Guy'?
That receiver may be repairable. The RESET MCU line is two-way. It can be a watch-dog timer output if the MCU is stuck in a loop.
According to the MCU TMP87CM71 datasheet section 1.11 "Reset circuit", in watch-dog activation mode the RESET line can be a pulsed output
with a period of 2^20 / Fc [s] = 131ms at Fc = 8Mhz. In this unit the crystal gives Fc = 4MHz.
Thus the watch-dog output period here is 262ms which gives 3.8146 Hz, which is virtually exactly what you are seeing at 9:32.
Therefore the MCU may be stuck, glitched. This can be a classic case of supercap holding up the stuck MCU.
I recommend you gently fully discharge the memory supercap which seems to be C401. Don't bother with reset procedures, the supercap is THE reset procedure.
Simply pressing power a few times is NOT the official reset procedure.
And check for shorted outputs. That (protection mode) and other reasons may also be why the MCU does not come up.
Please keep trying. It is highly probable that the unit can be fixed. It is highly unlikely that the MCU is bad.
Good luck. Let me know if I can be of further assistance.
[ Edit ] One more thing: Please be aware that for complete grounding often the complete back panel must be attached or jumper wires
connected to fully connect all grounds. Failure to do so can often lead one down the wrong path. Perhaps not in this unit, but still good practice.
Hope Mark tries this
Nice detective work Tim. It never would have occurred to me that the reset line was bi!
@@marcseclecticstuff9497 Me neither. But something was odd. There was nothing else connected to that reset line.
I don't know why I took the time, but I was just very suspicious. I have never seen that or at least bothered to look it up before.
I should look closely when examining datasheets. Likely more of them do that. Hope it helps. Happy listening ... yet ... ?
I was just about to post this. Something making the MCU go to reset loop. Does not mean MCU itself is dead.
Thanks Tim. I dig a little bit deeper and as far as I understood according to the TMP87CM71F datasheet (1.10) the watchdog behavior must be initialized after reset. So my guess is a "Adress Trap Reset" caused by degraded rom (for example cant find qualified reset vector) and matches the timing diagram. There is also a OTP replacement part (TMP87PP71F) but without firmware and special programmer (example: Xeltek ~1k$) I think is hopeless.
I have this excat denon amp from over 20 years ago it's my baby I actually cleaned it out recently and it's still alive after all this time I'm sad to see this one has died this was my first ever Amp it has a special place in my heart ♥
After watching this video I pray it's got many more yrs to live
I like that you don't faff about unnecessarily testing unrelated stuff to find the fault, you get right to the issue. Excellent work, as always.
Be like telling someone a Family member has died. You can't win them all Mark. Keep 'Em Coming.
"" be like"", im glad I don't speak like this.
Excellent!. Had I seen your vids when I was 15 or 16 I would have surely chosen a different career ... still find it a bit of a 'Magicians apprentice' job. Went into Mainframe software development and OS instead but now (over 70) the old hardware still calls to me. Well done!
Amazing, I got a Denon AVR receiver just last week with the exact same issue -- only the standby light on, no other display and no reaction from the power switch or any other switches no matter what -- AND all of the output voltages were there so it acted like it was on. I came to the same conclusion -- dead CPU. I learned a lot in the troubleshooting though, and also learned never to bother with a Denon showing only a standby light again. Thanks for the video, now at least I have some confirmation I wasn't way off base!
maybe a common issue with these? premature failure of the cpu? or killed by that dry jointed regulator
@@andygozzo72 In my case, there were no dry joints or any power issues so I don't know what killed it.
Back in the 80s, when these computer controlled audio receivers became popular, we had a lot of success "discharging" the MOSFET inputs by power off, connecting a jumper to ground and swiping it across all the legs of the MCU. Not exactly sure, really didn't care since it worked, this worked, and I hadn't thought of it in 30 years. It might be worth a try, if you haven't trashed the Denon yet. I enjoy watching you work. I've been away from component level repair for more than 20 years, having gotten into IT when I saw the repair business disappearing, with "swap while in warrantee, and trash when out" manufacturer philosophy. Thanks for sharing.
Great detective work Mark! At least there was a datasheet and schematic for you to use to try to fix this. (Unlike so many computers I try to fix)
Your that 2-bit guy
I've never seen anyone proceed with electronics disassembley with such evil delight. Charming!
This is why I steer clear of all Denon receivers. I've seen way too many broken ones and I'm not a skilled enough technician to keep them alive. Thanks for sharing this video Mark!
I have a Denon receiver that I bought about 10 years ago as a 'demo' unit. Was the last one on the shelf at the store, it had been a powered display unit for awhile. It's been a great unit, sound quality is fantastic, the 5 channels inside are separate. Only thing I've had to do once in awhile is take the remote apart and clean the button pads, especially for the volume up/down etc. But since it's going to be over 10 years old soon, if it ever dies, I'll chuck it. Was on sale at a pretty good discount since it was 'open box'.
I quit buying Denon products many years ago when they were known as a somewhat "high end" brand and all I seemed to have was bad luck with them. Too many better options out there to take the risk in my opinion.
Excellent work.
The comment, "That's weird?" .........is something I have muttered a hundred times when trying to debug a circuit.
I know the unit is old, but to be unable to fix a receiver because of software in a discontinued chip is very disappointing.
That software/chip is just an unnecessary (control) wart in the circuitry: I am old school....all you need is:
input jacks, selector switches, preamp, amp, speaker jacks.
Leave the software to iPads.
Ho letto i messaggi di alcuni utenti su queste discussioni per il raggiungimento della riparazione finale, per far tornare in vita l'apparecchio.
E sono sempre più convinto che 40anni fà ho fatto la scelta giusta, per aver deciso di studiare l'elettronica. Il mio indirizzo di studio era radio e tv.
Grazie a Mark e a TUTTI QUANTI VOI, per aver conosciuto anche soltanto leggendo, le vostre assolute grandi capacità di arrivare fino in fondo alla riparazione.
Mark è assolutamente eccezionale nel riparare di tutto, ma leggo con mia grande gioia che ci sono altrettanti Mark a cui poter tranquillamente affidare in riparazione i propri gioelli elettronici.
GRAZIE A TUTTI VOI
❤
One of my favourites from you Mark this one! Love the detective work more than anything. Fix or not, it's always an education.
Great video - I worked in a Hifi shop at weekends 30 years ago when I became interested in electronics and building amps and active crossovers. I was horrified at the amount of nasty cheap components in the signal path - stuff I would never put in my own builds - carbon film resistors in the signal path - even in the NFB in amps costing a months wages!
Marketing, Gimmickry, proprietary protectionism and planned obsolescence, not much has changed.
I have a Denon 35 watt am fm receiver I bought in the eighties. It's class A and can be cranked up to maximum volume with little distortion. Great video on this one Mark............
I have a similar era Denon receiver, an AVR 2500 that I bought new in 1996 or so. I've used it heavily and it's my favorite receiver ever. It has the ability to make any set of speakers you hook up to it sound fantastic. It ran a pair of Klipsch Chorus IIs for about a decade, it lived through 8 years on a modified sine wave power inverter in my cabin, now it runs a sub/satellite Bose speaker system in my office. It was my 2nd "big" audio purchase ever and I hope it lives another 27 years. Only quirk it has is sometimes the buttons on the unit will act like you pressed a totally different button.
Iam so glad your Channel came up on my TH-cam. It was great to see you go through diagnosing the fault .I Have Subscribed and will be checking some other videos of yours, Great work Mark.
Thank you for this educational video, very nice to learn more about electronics.
Absolutely fascinating. I detest the way we have to throw away stuff now. I recently repaired my 1994 akai integrated amp. Cost 17p for a couple of capacitors and resistors . Sadly went again 6 months later so beyond my skill to fix. I then wnet for a marantz costing over a grand. Sadly I know some day maybe ten years from now something will go and it will be another bin job. It is crazy. Thanks for the video, I am subscribing.
You are one of the best electronic repair channel on TH-cam. I definitely learned more about electronics with you than in school. Thank you for sharing your passion with us.
Worlds, happiest component level, electronics repair person.
I don’t know how I got here. I have no idea what pins and transistors are advocating signal and voltage drop is. But I find it very relaxing and helping fall asleep. Typing is making me sleepy too
Showing things that can't be rejuvenated is assume. Most tubers don't do this.great job sir
well tried I forgotten a lot I learned since my stroke so admire you and being a radio ham i need to repair things but often i just leave them , thanks for the video
Have repaired thousand of thousands of Denon Hi-Fi between late 80's to early 2000. Do even have a DRA-275 for my pc.. :P It's was a very very reliable receiver. Most common thing was blown inputs (due to user connecting/disconnecting stuff with all stuff turned on) or a cooked mains transformer because of stacking things on top and drive it hard. The transformer has a temp fuse you can locate and wiggle out and replace with some handywork. Your thing is rare and seems more of just get the remote and turn it on or manual reset by first discharge all caps completely then use a solderwick and ground all legs on the mc by drag the grounded wick over the legs of the mc. Feel free to holler if you need Denon tips.
If I still may suggest, provided it is not yet scrapped, I would suggest you to check main Vcc pins on MCU on an (fast DSO) scope during power on. If some capacitor on power rail is dead, which I can imagine there may well be some, the inrush current to MCU will cause a voltage drop, simply causing MCU to reset. All I am saying this could be as simple as power supply issue.
I'm surprised he didn't notice or mention the multiple, easily visible puddles in the dust at the beginning of the video, where things have obviously gotten wet at some point. I'm betting a lot of the caps have leaked onto the board and are now effectively nothing more than resistors to the circuit
I’ve fixed more older inoperative electronics with recapping then anything. They loose their value with age and they short other components when they leak.
@@Knaeckebrotsaege Yes, there were some tell-tail signs of leakage on that board in the beginning of the video.
Maybe not the inrush current, however you can get shorts, oscillating power regulators, etc. Electrolytic caps tend to die with age, as Fireship1 posted earlier.
@@Knaeckebrotsaege or, someone clueless used spray cleaner (shudder).
What a knowledgeable and friendly man! I just found your channel and been bingeing on your content lately!
Your opening sequence is such a joy. The subsequent repair etc is the icing on the cake.
Look at it glowing away like the saddest Hal 9000 - what an epic statement right there sir!
You poor little Denon, I will always carry you in my heart 😞
You still do Radio in 2023, muhuhahahahahaha
I love your British expressions. Dry solder joint. Across the pond we call it a Cold solder joint. It's still dry but it's cold. And it didn't get wet with molten solder lately.
I've gone through some of these cold solder joint parts before. Sometimes you can't just re-solder them. You have to remove them. You have to clean the leads. Scrape them down. Then reinstall. Then re-solder. Otherwise you might get some crappy connections that don't seem to be dry or cold. But they are insulated! They have insulated themselves. That's how they got that way. It's a metallurgy phenomena of, nonidentical metals being connected with each other. And their molecules begin to fight each other. And they start to out gas a fine white film. To insulate itself. And that's why you need to physically clean and scrape down those leads. For a truly good solid electrical connection that will last for decades, to come.
You see…… You are only being tasked. With fixing a cheap old stereo receiver. It's a bit different. When you are trying to restore, recover, refurbish, rebirth a, 1978, $85,000, custom-built for NBC-TV News, in Washington, DC. A British Rupert Neve 36 input, custom console. That has to work like new again. And continue on for an additional 20 years. Working like new again.
I've done it to that one and others. And it is no easy short-term chore. Way beyond fixing a cheap consumer stereo. And amazed at your own lack of knowledge. For a Brit? My goodness man! Have you lost all your self-respect?! Or is this all blasphemy? And by the way how is your Queen? Is she still dead? Good. She should stay that way. Now her,, inbred son is ready to destroy the monarchy. And then to dump, Queen Camilla Bowles. For a younger hottie! Yeah baby! It's good to be the King. And off with her head! And where's Princess Diana? Is she also still dead? Good! Now neither will know who's pussy I shall grab! As if you are King. They let you do it. And I'm sure he can, hardly wait. I mean just because he's already 74 doesn't mean anything! Just ask brother Andrew. He likes them really young. And enslaved. Don't ask me why? He was a friend of Jeffrey Epstein. Who was murdered in jail by the Trump/Rudy/Bannon Mafia. Where they all wanted to be the Fixer. And they fixed Jeffrey just fine. And now his 16-year-old girlfriend has nobody to help her. And she was the good-looking one. As it wasn't, Jeffrey. He looked like a Jewish nerd. Because he was. And liked young underage girls. Go figure with these schmuck's? Who wants a young girl? They don't know anything. They don't know what they want or how they want it? I like women who know such things and how to do them. Not the stupid young ones you have to teach everything to. What the hell is wrong with those boys in their 40s and 50s and 60s? There little happy but he doesn't get hard over people their own age anymore? I guess not?
I think older women with gray hair are very sexy. WOW! And they know what they want. And they can articulate that. So always a good ride for both. And experienced boy man only wants inexperienced little girls? What kind of maturity is that? It's at least between the 6th and 7th grade girls? And not younger than 12. In Texas. Before you can rape them. They have to be at least 12. According to Texan law! Which will be enforced! Because if you rape a little girl earlier than 12? You are in big trouble buddy! Of course it will also be your child. And you do not have to allow for her to have an abortion. Otherwise you can have her parents and the doctor arrested and thrown in jail for 20 years. Which is the perfectly moral thing to do. To an immoral act of abortion due to rape. Why? It's a miracle! If she doesn't want that baby? We will take it! And raise it with Jesus. And so she will have the next, immaculate conception. That Donnie won the election. The election conception. And all of the liberal Democrats aborted him! Which they should die for! Or at least go to jail for the rest of their lives! But we don't want to pay for them! So they will have to grow their own food in jail. Or they can have the outdated dog food. As it is still delicious and nutritious and dogs love it. They never complain. YOU SHOULDN'T EITHER!
This then would all work out well. In the Soviet Union. Pre-apocalypse.
RemyRAD
electrical appliance repair It's a stressful job. But you're playing for fun. ..extremely appreciated
Bummer...
Nice job chasing it though. Your logic is sound, it was interesting following along and you're tenatious.
Age-wise, according to HiFi Wiki, the manufacturing years for that Denon receiver was from 1996 - '98.
I have a 'DRA 425-R' receiver that's older, but still runs fine. Maybe one aspect that has kept it in shape was using a power-strip as a power-on/power-off switch; as I am suspect of push-button on/off switch's lifespan.
Excellent channel on the topic of repairing electronics, on par with NorthridgeFix, which is based exclusively on microsoldering. Mark seems to be much more versatile and modest than NorthridgeFix guy. At the same time Mark shows his work very entertaininly...
Every identifiable date code in that is from 1996. That’s way before the transition to lead-free. But cracked joints (not “dry joints” - dry joints are a specific type of soldering error, which does not include thermal cycling induced fracture) happen to thermally cycled joints with leaded solder.
i picked up the same reciever about 9 years ago for 30$cad at a yard sale. It's been my bedroom radio for quite some time. I always thought there was more on the inside. So far i been lucky no issues yet
open it up and check for dry joints!
Great to see, hopefully further advice from comments will see this working. I used to work at Marshall Amplification in test & service (88-93), then Alpine Car Audio (93-97), before the days of in-circuit firmware upgrades so regularly replaced similar controllers.
Yes when AV Receivers and the like are controlled by a Microprocessor it's a ticking bomb. Onkyo AV receivers are also notorious with similar problem in their Syscon boards. With this Denon you may succeed in fidling for the On/Off control to power up but other function like source selection, etc. may not work either so yeah it's parts out unit then. I love watching videos on this channel which give good information. Mark is really patient at work and always smile.
"That 80-pin rectangular bastard has all the answers"
LOL
It was an illegitimate repair ... almost :-)
😂😂 that tickled me too .
Can't win them all. But this video is a great example of investigating and finding the source of the problem.
I have a Denon DRA-325R from 1989. Was given to me. Lightly used in an office (they guy listened to AM radio through some fairly expensive speakers).. I got it some years ago and just started using it again when my NAD C368 failed. Died in 3 years yet the old Denon still works. Go figure!
Great analysis of the problem. I would never have found it.
My compliments for your endurance anf skills.
A pitty to waste a Denon.
I still have an AVR 1000 pro logic recoevet with excellent audio quality.
Build around 1992 and still going strong.
Greetz from 🇳🇱
I repaired a similar vintage receiver the other week. What was odd is that the reset was not clean / fast enough with the "dim lamp" in series with the mains and the micro failed to start. As soon as I went back to straight mains the unit it worked fine. It had me flummoxed for a minute!
What a shame !!
I love your channel-and your good and cheery humour,I’ve watched you successfully fix quite a number of products-but sadly ‘you can’t win ‘em all’ !!
That was awesome. I figure my Denon amp will stay dead. love your work Mark
It might just be the watchdog timer resetting the processor, so it might still be caused by some other external circuit.
Man, I feel your pain, I have spent thousands of hours trying to fix this stuff only to realise you can’t. It is so demoralizing when you realise you can buy an alternative for €20., its such a shame but its just how it goes, time marches on and sometimes it is just not worth the effort. But, still a challenge. And that’s the fun of it.
This is exactly why most of todays cars wont be repairable in 20 years time, full of un-serviceable obsolete electronics, that will cost more to fix than what the car is worth!
@@NOWThatsRichy So true, too much electronics nowadays. Best we can do is keep the older ones on the road and not support and buy the new crap. Bad direction the world is going in.
I had to repair my 1987 DENON DCD-900 CD player, due to it skipping. Here I had to invest about 6 drops of electric shaver oil, to fix the problem. The mechanical movement was somewhat inhibited, due to the partially hardening of the old old lubricant. I just fixed my 15 year old coffee maker about 1/2 an hour ago. It had a blown thermal fuse. Other than that, after a few repairs over the years, my 2004 stainless steel microwave oven is still up and going. I purchased it for about $45, due to it being a display model, or so they said. In truth, only half the keyboard worked, so I fixed that by simply cleaning the keyboard electrical contacts. At one point about 5 years ago, with just a couple of drops of glue, I repaired the turntable motor, in which there was slipping occurring between the spinning center donut-magnet, and the gear that sits inside it. Also at another time there were the required replacements of the door micro-switches and the main fuse. These replacement parts were obtained from someone else's oven that they had tossed out to the curb for disposal. And I also fixed my 2009 SAMSUNG TV, which I am watching this video on today. I had to replace one bulging electrolytic capacitor in the power supply section. Then at one point my computer monitor brick power supply became intermittent. It was a bad soldering joint on the transformer, where one wire was poorly soldered to one of the multiple transformer posts. So it was not even a PCB soldering problem. Other than that, my old backup computers PSU was causing a boot looping problem. I replaced the bad PSU electrolytic caps, and that fixed the boot up problem, and it cost about $9.50 for the parts. So all of these items are still up and going, and the repair costs were less than $20 overall. I love saving money.
Dear Mark. Many thanks for your efforts. However, in my experience, the only good Denon is a doorstop!!!!!
The A.V. amps are utterly unserviceable. Also no ready backup.
I commend you for trying on this "basic" one.
Better luck next time.
Regards Allan.
Commiserations.
Yes. My experience with 2 Denon AVR is the typical processor overheat and needs reballing due to no connections. Dislike Denons due to known issues for which repair parts are no longer available.
My 40 year old Sansui Amp is still working with the only issue is scratchy pot’s. Some of the good stuff are still Made in Japan!
Hey Mark, I have one of the same model that is also dead. I hope you can solve this.
I look forward to seeing your second episode. I get motivation from your smile. Go ahead.
That pulse looks quite digital (timing etc.). So I expect the CPU still runs fine. It's probably the program running on the MCU trying to initialize some peripheral, then gets stuck waiting for it to respond. The watchdog unit then attempts to reset the MCU hoping that the next boot will be successful. Maybe there is some i2c bus you can monitor. But it's a lot of work :)
I had a Denon receiver around that time. It didn't have an issue removing from standby mode into playing mode. Mine also had an enhanced bass button near bottom right next to the variable loudness. It worked very well, I added a graphic equalizer to it using the first cassette player input which gave more control and doubled the volume.
I own a DRA 45 that was dead after power switch cycle! The only repair shop wanted more in a bench check charge than what the receiver was worth ! I decided to at least try resetting board connections , and clean internal power switch ! The receiver powered on with no other apparent issues !😁
Just love the time lapse repair thanks to editing. That was some good troubleshooting, your eyes are doing better than mine. Would have a difficult time counting the leads on that controller, yikes.
you all say weird things here, why you people need Radio in 2023 ?
you did not read what you already types here, you all say the same thing .......
The microcontroller is reprogrammable, and still available. The Denon allows for DFU ( direct firmware update ) using a DOS/Windows program to perform the first update. It is an older Denon ( being 20 years old indeed ) which doesn't support many modern features that are needed for HDTV's ... but it is a pity that it's for the bin.
I had this exact amplifier, I'm fairly sure from memory that you need it's remote control to bring it out of standby and that was the only way you could do it. I assume the processor is generating it's own reset cycle. Thanks for the excellent continue, reminds me of my TV and audio repair days.
Nice to see the use of an Aldi screwdriver, I must have missed when that was for sale!
I have a Lidl one, branded 'Parkside' - bloody brilliant, has survived use and abuse over several years. Lithium Battery is getting a bit weak now, but only to be expected after all this use.
As a hobby user, I wouldn't spend the money on 'De Wilt - sic' etc...
The good old days when you got a circuit board diagram with high end hifi equipment.
I can not stop watching your videos! I have no words! Just brilliant! Perfect! I am not sure about your background. Priest? School teacher? Bilioner hobbiest? All together?
Recently found your channel Mark and love it. A true engineer at work. Keep up the amazing work. Cheers. Matt
I have a question for you Mark about your favorite brand, Denon! I bought a Denon AVR-2802 new about the year 2000. Used it for a couple of months, and then stored it away for about 24 years. Pulled it out the other day, and it does turn on. Just doesn't make any sound through speakers. The headphone function works marginally but pretty low. It's not muted, not on the wrong input, working speakers and connection. It even outputs a signal through rec out to a sub with a cd player connected to it. I imagine other functions work short of playing through speakers. What do you think from afar?
I knew it would be a micom failure. It's the only thing that will stop my shop from fixing one of these too. Micom failures are rare and so disappointing when they're encountered.
I always put these machines on the floor outside and give them a good blasting with the hosepipe, then leave them to dry, they look like new afterwards. They are always fixable afterwards :)
Hi Mark, Thanks for sharing your great knowledge with us! I've recently bought Denon PMA SX11 (online order from Japan) and the day I received (last week) , I powered it on through my existing step-down transformer which says 500Wt but continuous 400 wt. The moment I tried to turn on my unit, it started blinking (power button blinking green) and clicking but not turning it into solid green. I asked for help from my supplier who told me use 5000watt transformer which I ordered through amazon. Now, when I connected it through the new transformer which can handle up 5000watt (continuous 4500watt) , the power button is not green but it stays red for a while without any clicking noise and then goes off afer a while. I was so excited when I got it and now I am worried thinking to send back to Japan for repairing. Any advise so that it can be seen and resolved the issue in the UK? Would appreciate your advice! Thank you so much!
Soooo much screws, you definitely need a DeWalt DCF680. I enjoy your videos very much. I am a hobbyist from Vienna Austria. I try my best an learn from you. Rock on and best regards.
I repair electronic equipment for a hobby (self taught) and I usually get everything working, but when I start to open some device to repair, I always dread that an unobtainable IC has failed in it. For example, in this video, where you will have to bin the Denon. That's why I enjoy working on pre-IC equipment like old Dansette record players, where the parts are still easily available.
Mark is like the Bob Ross of electronics.
I like his jovial nature
I never thought I'd feel sad about the demise of old tech but in this case I do. Disposable tech feels like such a waste of valuable resources. Such a shame, but nice try Mark, great video and onto the next project.
Could still be used as a 40 WPC power amp with only a single input. Looks like the volume and tone controls are analog and wouldn't need the CPU.
Thanks for showing us the ones that got away!
"That eighty pin rectangular bastard has all the answers" 🤣
Seriously though, that PCB is bloody awful with all those jumper links and pots and I/O sockets soldered directly to the board, though the PSU and heatsink do appear to be adequately rated.
Good work, thanks for the video.
There is absolutely nothing wrong with any of those supposed shortcomings. That’s all perfectly normal for consumer AV gear: jumper links cost less than a double-sided board, and it’s perfectly normal to solder PCB-mount connectors and pots to a PCB.
@Antonio Tejada Soft soldered joints should not be relied on for mechanical strength and jumper links introduce unreliability because there are more soldered joints. As someone who worked in aerospace electronics for 20+ years and designed and built dozens of projects I consider myself to be in a position to speak from experience. The brand Naim is commercial and their products do not have connectors mounted directly on and soldered to the PCB.
What do you want from a single sided board?
Found this channel at random. Very interesting and more views to you, very educational.
I use car polish compound on the display screen. Fix almost any scratch. Also, you can use wetsand and try to cut down the scratch as much as you can and repolish the surface with again car polish compound. Thanks me later.
Happens more and more, ending up with a factory programmed chip making repair completely impossible, absolutely frustrating !!!
That’s why I went to industrial electronics and mechanical and heavy equipment not a good business model repairing consumer electronics and business cost rise as consumers equipment drops in price tv so cheap many send to ewaste stations
“Rectangular bastard”. That’s the funniest description of a quad flat package IC I’ve ever heard :D
I've noticed on the intro that there are video clips that do not appear in Mark's youtube channel, I'm sure there is a reason why....?
Edit: NO NOT THROW AWAY!! A couple of Denon DRA-275RD's are listed on ebay. *"I bought a donor Denon DRA-275RD - My diagnosis assumptions were correct!!"*
You win some, you loose some. But well done, maticlous approach to fault finding.
I have had nothing but bad luck with Denon receivers. I purchased three of them over the years. I would never purchase another one. the last receiver I purchased was a Yamaha and that has worked perfectly for years now.
If the micro is watchdogging and cycling the reset, it maybe because an external signal or condition is not there, i.e. comms to the RDS module, etc at powerup or even power rail voltage monitoring. I've dealt with products that won't power up (and stay in standby) because of simple things like it can't detect a working fan! So worth checking some of those other inputs to the micro and comms (check for responses to outbound transmissions to external peripherals and modules). Did you check for a stuck switch on the front panel?
This lets me know I should stick with older stuff for repairs .. too small more my liking. Love the vid though, very interesting!
I happen to have a DRA335R unit. very similar to this model. My problem with it is the pull out knob for the variable loudness has a nasty crackle to it and it will cut out randomly. I have tried to rotate the knob in every position pushing and pulling etc to try and clear the static (carbon build up?) tried a quality electronic spray from the front panel... still exists... do you happen to have any bloody hell recommendations on cleaning that up OR replacing if the part is even out there anymore... might you have a part number? Your a brain child repairman and amazing one at that.
Just like HAL 9000.....Dave? what are you doing....Dave?
Hi Mark
I stumbled on your videos, I must admit I really enjoy the videos, how you're repairing equipment. Very impressed with your test gear. Keep up the good work. One day I may need you to fix some of equipment.
Brian
quite an unusual failure -makes me wonder if that 6v regulator went dry jointed on its ground pin first so input voltage got sent straight to the output pin as unregulated and blew the micro -but then the micro wants a 5v supply not 6v unless its going through a diode for a memory backup cap then 6v is about right-now i want to find a schematic to check my guess !
thats what i suspect, commented elsewhere on here about it ,, its what kills commodore 64s,
Ohh I love a quick troubleshot without 5 min watching how you unscrew a box, I love it. You have a new subscriber!
I enjoy so much your very interested channel. Thank you so much, please never stop to make fantastic videos. Thanks so lot !!!
Try a Denon remote to turn it on. After the amp goes into protection mode, you need remote to start it.
OR get a Harmony remote and program it for the Denon receiver, that typically works for old IR receivers for me when I dont have the original remote.
Excellent work, the fading of the LED at the end really made me sad tho hahaha
First time I see this channel. IT IS GREAT. Love the old HiFi stuff.
Great video, enjoyed watching that, have subscribed and will be watching more of you! Excellent work!! Thank you!
I had wondered about the new lead-less solder, is the new stuff any better? Frankly I that they
went to far about going lead-less. So far as the receiver? another black weightless box with tiny print or labeling. Give me a Pioneersx650 or Kenwood KR6030.
only came across this channel, absolutely brilliant!!!!
I am planning to do a full service on our Denon PMA-450. It is still working OK and luckily it has not got any microprocessor. There are 4 op amps NJM5534DD, which are now discontinued but still available.
Are these worth upgrading to something better?