Thursday, January 19, 2017

Hojo and the case of the faulty FT-2800M

Hojo and the case of the faulty FT-2800M


Background

A friend, Joe / W2IFB mentioned that he had a Yaesu FT-2800M fail on him.  He had been keyed in a long QSO for more than 10 minutes when the radio failed, catastrophically.  Thinking that he had blown the final, he tried replacing the final transistor.  Unfortunately, it didn't work.  He reported that the radio was basically in a "short" when plugged in.

He gave me the radio and said "It's yours!  If you fix it, maybe I'll buy it back!"  I accepted the challenge.

Initial testing


I took the radio and set the current limiting on my power supply to 300ma, figuring that would be sufficient to demonstrate a problem.  I plugged the radio in, and sure enough, it was drawing current HARD.  Placing my ohm meter across the power leads, it showed 0 ohms.  It's in a dead short.

Investigation


I opened up the radio and snooped around the board a little.  I saw the power transistor that had been replaced, but didn't see any shorts nearby.  It also seemed unlikely that a problem in the final would cause a dead short when the radio was still powered off.   I also observed what appears to be a two-turn inductor coil that may have gotten a bit smushed.  None of this looked like the cause of the short, however.



I pulled out the schematics and took a look at the routing of the power.  I assume the short must be very early in the circuit, since the unit uses a soft power switch, and it hasn't even been powered on. Glancing at the schematic, and board, I saw a few voltage regulators, and a protection diode.




The protection diode was right near the edge of the board, and an obvious first thing to check.  It's a clamping diode, so a surge of some kind may have caused it to fail.


I removed the diode from the board, and sure enough!  It's a dead short.  0 ohms in both directions. Further, I hooked it to the power supply and confirmed that the diode was permitting full voltage rom the supply through it in both directions.  It's blown.



Yaesu is kind enough to list the manufacturers part number in their service manual.  Digi-key has the part for $0.48.  I'll tuck one onto my next order.

Further testing


With the diode removed, the power leads no longer showed a short.  Encouraged, I decided to simply hook power to the board and see if the current draw was reasonable. The head was still detached, so I didn't expect the radio to power on. Sure enough,  the current draw was down in the 10s of milliamps. I think that's reasonable.

Hooking up a more beefy power supply, I was able to run through a full suite of tests, and confirm that it was simply the diode at fault.  The radio was working just fine.

Repair and Alignment

I ordered up the diode and got it in from Digi-Key.  The installation was trivial.

I went ahead and did a few tests prior to aligning the radio.  It was transmitting about -650 hz off frequency at 146.000.  Most other metrics seemed good, though it was only making about 50 watts on high power (should be 65).

The Jig

The perform the alignment, I needed to inject signals into the microphone port.  I decided to make a jig that I could use for this project, and in the future.  

 I built a 6-pin cable to use for the project, and sorted out the pinout.  Yaesu uses a common ground for the Mic and PTT.  The Mic inputs go to the BNC port.  The PTT goes to the toggle switch.


The finished product.  Now I can pump signals right from my service monitor into the mic port on the radio.  The toggle switch makes it easy to engage the PTT without holding a button,



Alignment Details

I followed the alignment procedure from the manual.  Notes here for posterity.


Adjustment Original Value Adjusted Value
PLL Reference -645 hz -15 hz
TP-TVC 1.547 v 1.502
TP-TVC 0.925 v Not adjusted.  Broken Trim Pot.
Target value was 1.3 v.
TUN 137 1.987 v 2.009 v
TUN 146  2.050 v 2.051 v
TUN 160 2.026 v 2.026 v
TUN 173 2.018 v 2.018 v
TXPW H 50 w 65 w

All other setting values were already optimal when measured, and were left alone.  Current readings on transmit were all well under published maximums.



2 comments:

  1. Hello Michael. Thank you for the nice report on repairing the Yaesu radio. It has come to my attention that it would be advantageous to deliberately limit the 2800 to 50 watts max as the high power operation leads to a well documented PA failure at full 65 watts out. Can you sum up how you adjusted the output up to
    i can turn mine down?

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    Replies
    1. Fred, the alignment of the TXPW H setting is detailed in the FT-2800M service manual. Basically, it can be achieved by adjusting software settings. I've snipped the few relevant lines from the manual below:
      ------
      To enter the Alignment mode:
      1. Press and hold in the [LOW] key and [D/MR] key
      while turning the radio on. Once the radio is on, release
      these two keys.
      2. Press and hold the [MHz] key for one second to activate
      the “Set” (Menu) mode.
      3. Rotate the DIAL knob to select “35 D/ASMT,” then
      press the [MHz] key.
      4. You will now note the appearance of “REF” on the
      display, this signifies that the transceiver is now in
      the “Alignment mode.”
      -------
      TX Power Output
      (TXPW H/TXPW M/TXPW L2/TXPW L1)
      1. Tune the transceiver to 146.000 MHz, and set the
      Transmitter Power Level to “HIGH.”
      2. Set the transceiver to Alignment mode, then rotate the
      DIAL knob to set the Alignment parameter to “TXPW
      H.”
      3. Press the PTT switch to activate the transmitter, and
      press the [REV] or [D/MR] key for 65 Watts on the
      wattmeter, and confirm that supply current remains
      below 12.5 A.
      4. Press and hold the [LOW] key for one second to save
      the new setting, then rotate the DIAL knob one click
      to clockwise to set the Alignment parameter to
      “TXPW M.”
      ... procedure continues for other power levels ...
      ----

      Hope that helps!
      Mike

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