I am currently going through my Marantz 2275 and found your video and must say that you solved a problem of a short for me I had with my unit. Your video was well filmed and your narration on everything that you were doing was very helpful. Keep up the good work!
Just when you thought it was safe to watch a Norcal715 video without acetone..... Jokes aside, definitely one of the more interesting repair videos of late, great repair!
hes deffo a one off. his troubleshooting skills and teachings are best ive seen. like when testing a pcb, ground connectios and tracing faults, i learnt loads from him. then he dissapeared for couple years. now hes back.
Nice work on tedious meter work. 🙌 REALLY liked seeing the vintage Sencore SG165 being used on vintage equipment. ABSOLUTELY blew me away when you pulled out the acetone. 🤣 Great stuff Steve.
Hi, I hope everything's going well, I suggest you can teach us how select replacement transistors when we repair vintage Amps like this Marantz. That's my request. Regards.
I'm sure my old Marantz needs some TLC service as well (not being used at this moment). Also my Adcom 80's GFA-555 amp. I still run the Adcom hard and it is stock. I'm sure it needs to get tuned up. Probably should get it tuned up before something shorts and fries my Darlington outputs. Aww I forgot I also have a 70's Pioneer receiver/Tuner rated at 45 Watts per channel which easily runs 100Wpc clean that should be tuned up.(also not used at this point). Guess I need to save up and have you go through and make them right again. Thanks for the vids. New equipment is garbage!
Would check those emitter resistors as they likely have drifted in value up with having the massive current pulse from the failed transistors put through them. With the failed ones a decap with a microscope view would be interesting, and then some comparisons with the still somewhat working ones. Going to guess the PNP failed first, silicon PNP power was always a harder transistor to get right, unlike Germanium, which was the opposite.
Nice work. I think you could have centered that tuning meter without disassembling anything by following step 11:8 in the FM alignment section of the service manual. Center tuning adjustment is made by adjusting the upper core of the discriminator transformer L201 to center the needle. At any rate, job well done.
That step only works if the tuning meter is mechanically centered. I tried to adjust the discriminator and when the tuning meter was centered the alignment was off. Plus with power off it needed to be centered (OCDness)
I had a sansui reciever with transistors like that and one channel was bad causing damage to the driver circuit. The other channel was okay but if you put the fuse in the dead channel it would blow right away. I took it somewhere and they tried to repair it but was unsuccessful.
Great video. I'm glad you are showing how to refresh these classic receivers. They still perform on a par with the best amps today. I noticed you upgraded the outputs to the higher rated mj21195 / 96 pair, perfectly fine subs at even higher ratings .Overkill, in fact. There are many counterfeit power transistor sellers in China, so buyer beware. Buy these parts from a trusted US distributor or you may be sorry. Also, It looked like the mica pads were put on dry originally (not sure, maybe just clear grease?), glad you put some fresh silicone grease there. In your earlier video, you changed the indicator bulbs to LEDs. Did you use white LEDs for the pin bulbs, and cool blue for the fuse bulbs. I plan to do this on my 2275 and will buy individual LEDS, so I wondered what exact color for the pin LEDs, warm white or cool?
Great Work! I got a Marantz 2252 works perfectly except the FM radio, it drops out once in a while and around 10-15 seconds after it comes back, it stays normal after it warms up, jut wonder what is the problem with the FM? Any idea?
Hi. Thanks for the great class. Congratulations on the high resolution video. What I would like to ask is about my 2275, it has 2SD733/2SB697 transistor pairs on the outputs, they are working fine, but are they correct for this Marantz model? I also have 2 pairs of transistors 2SA747A and 2SC1116A, will they be suitable for model 2275? Thanks.
hello , can you make a video on how you organize your lab ? i am having hard time to organize mine , how the equipment that you use often thank you sir can you tell please at what charts do you use for esr test , how do you know by hart what the value should be for every cap an , thank you
How much did you charge the customer for a job like this? Just the labour without parts? I never know what to ask, what is the right way to calculate the price. Thank you.
On the comeback I charged one hour for the amp repair plus parts, and one hour for the meter repair. The total with parts was $150, but I do this in my spare time and charge less just to do it. The normal labor today would be between $75 and $100 per hour, it took approximately 3 hours total. As stated in the video I cut the customer a break.
I have an Onkyo tx-sr505 with recently blown output transistors on SBR. I haven’t used surround back speakers in over 10 years. Is it safe to remove the transistors and continue using the receiver without the back speakers ?
i was given a RS Analogue multimeter, and i struggle to use it, any simple tips? It was never used and came from a large chemical works in UK called ICI (Imperial chemical industries) like alot of stuff, its been bought out and is no more, so i got a multimeter
hi Norcal, hope your well m8? In UK , The goverment have reopened everything, but i know loads of Peeps getting covid, doesnt make sense. stay safe my mate
I am currently going through my Marantz 2275 and found your video and must say that you solved a problem of a short for me I had with my unit. Your video was well filmed and your narration on everything that you were doing was very helpful. Keep up the good work!
Just when you thought it was safe to watch a Norcal715 video without acetone..... Jokes aside, definitely one of the more interesting repair videos of late, great repair!
Saul Marantz would be pleased to know that his equipment is so loved and so revered this many years later.
Great video, now I can fix my Marantz 2275 with similar problems. Thanks a million
Hi Steve, good catch, great fix and the unit was worth it.
Great tuition. You have clear video and I enjoy seeing you troubleshoot in detail. Thanks and keep them coming.
hes deffo a one off. his troubleshooting skills and teachings are best ive seen. like when testing a pcb, ground connectios and tracing faults, i learnt loads from him. then he dissapeared for couple years. now hes back.
@@groovejet33 Best I have seen on RUclips. Including Mr Carlson
Nice work on tedious meter work. 🙌 REALLY liked seeing the vintage Sencore SG165 being used on vintage equipment. ABSOLUTELY blew me away when you pulled out the acetone. 🤣 Great stuff Steve.
That is what you get for not cleaning the faceplate in the last repair. Good repair
Nicely done! Thanks for the video.
Great attention to detail.
I really like the way you do your videos. Not so basic that its boring. Thank you.
Another excellent video and another satisfied customer.
Hi, I hope everything's going well, I suggest you can teach us how select replacement transistors when we repair vintage Amps like this Marantz. That's my request. Regards.
amazing video.excellent analysis.thenks
You do work fast! They really don't make stuff like this anymore.
Good job thank you..
I'm sure my old Marantz needs some TLC service as well (not being used at this moment). Also my Adcom 80's GFA-555 amp. I still run the Adcom hard and it is stock. I'm sure it needs to get tuned up. Probably should get it tuned up before something shorts and fries my Darlington outputs. Aww I forgot I also have a 70's Pioneer receiver/Tuner rated at 45 Watts per channel which easily runs 100Wpc clean that should be tuned up.(also not used at this point). Guess I need to save up and have you go through and make them right again. Thanks for the vids. New equipment is garbage!
Would check those emitter resistors as they likely have drifted in value up with having the massive current pulse from the failed transistors put through them.
With the failed ones a decap with a microscope view would be interesting, and then some comparisons with the still somewhat working ones. Going to guess the PNP failed first, silicon PNP power was always a harder transistor to get right, unlike Germanium, which was the opposite.
I did check them, just didn't record it.
Nice work. I think you could have centered that tuning meter without disassembling anything by following step 11:8 in the FM alignment section of the service manual. Center tuning adjustment is made by adjusting the upper core of the discriminator transformer L201 to center the needle. At any rate, job well done.
That step only works if the tuning meter is mechanically centered. I tried to adjust the discriminator and when the tuning meter was centered the alignment was off. Plus with power off it needed to be centered (OCDness)
I had a sansui reciever with transistors like that and one channel was bad causing damage to the driver circuit. The other channel was okay but if you put the fuse in the dead channel it would blow right away. I took it somewhere and they tried to repair it but was unsuccessful.
Too bad, they were great units.
I'm happy with that
Great job =D
Hi, Great vid. That thermal imaging camera is awesome! Where do I find one? Thanks, Rob
It is the Flir one pro.
👍...great memories..!!
Great video. I'm glad you are showing how to refresh these classic receivers. They still perform on a par with the best amps today. I noticed you upgraded the outputs to the higher rated mj21195 / 96 pair, perfectly fine subs at even higher ratings .Overkill, in fact. There are many counterfeit power transistor sellers in China, so buyer beware. Buy these parts from a trusted US distributor or you may be sorry. Also, It looked like the mica pads were put on dry originally (not sure, maybe just clear grease?), glad you put some fresh silicone grease there. In your earlier video, you changed the indicator bulbs to LEDs. Did you use white LEDs for the pin bulbs, and cool blue for the fuse bulbs. I plan to do this on my 2275 and will buy individual LEDS, so I wondered what exact color for the pin LEDs, warm white or cool?
The customer supplied the LED kit so I do not know where he purchased it from.
Great Work! I got a Marantz 2252 works perfectly except the FM radio, it drops out once in a while and around 10-15 seconds after it comes back, it stays normal after it warms up, jut wonder what is the problem with the FM? Any idea?
was surprised they were silicon and not germanium...
Hi. Thanks for the great class. Congratulations on the high resolution video. What I would like to ask is about my 2275, it has 2SD733/2SB697 transistor pairs on the outputs, they are working fine, but are they correct for this Marantz model?
I also have 2 pairs of transistors 2SA747A and 2SC1116A, will they be suitable for model 2275? Thanks.
Am I seeing things or was there no heatsink compound on the original transistors?
It had just silicone dielectric grease only.
@@norcal715 Probably had all evaporated away, leaving the output devices with little heatsinking and then one transistor failed.
hello , can you make a video on how you organize your lab ?
i am having hard time to organize mine , how the equipment that you use often
thank you
sir can you tell please at what charts do you use for esr test , how do you know by hart what the value should be for every cap an , thank you
Did you check the bias adj pot ?
How much did you charge the customer for a job like this? Just the labour without parts?
I never know what to ask, what is the right way to calculate the price.
Thank you.
I would charge parts and labor. Had nothing to do with original issue
On the comeback I charged one hour for the amp repair plus parts, and one hour for the meter repair. The total with parts was $150, but I do this in my spare time and charge less just to do it. The normal labor today would be between $75 and $100 per hour, it took approximately 3 hours total. As stated in the video I cut the customer a break.
Could you have just replaced the Right channel power transistors but not the working Left Channel (Would that cause any problem)
No issues if you do just one, I think doing both channels will prevent future issues.
I have an Onkyo tx-sr505 with recently blown output transistors on SBR. I haven’t used surround back speakers in over 10 years. Is it safe to remove the transistors and continue using the receiver without the back speakers ?
Should be ok, You may have to remove the driver transistors if one of those are bad. They can cause a DC offset on the speaker line also
@@norcal715 Perfect. Thank you so much for your reply and your excellent repair videos.
i was given a RS Analogue multimeter, and i struggle to use it, any simple tips? It was never used and came from a large chemical works in UK called ICI (Imperial chemical industries) like alot of stuff, its been bought out and is no more, so i got a multimeter
Send me a clear picture of it to Norcal715videos@gmail.com and I will try to help you.
@@norcal715 lovely
maybe over load on the output speaker so give up the transistor driver.
Tunung :D
What's the cost of repair?
On the comeback I charged one hour for the amp repair plus parts, and one hour for the meter repair. The total with parts was $150
3amps, 12v, what is the colleration? using ohms law, what does this tell you? what were you expecting?
A dead short!
The owner could have a defective speakers, without even knowing it.
hi Norcal, hope your well m8? In UK , The goverment have reopened everything, but i know loads of Peeps getting covid, doesnt make sense. stay safe my mate