- 2024
- Jan
- 21
An IMD-202-2 for parts…but let’s take a quick look anyway!
SO…here’s another one of these piece of crap meters. Why? This one was cheap, and was purchased non-working - primarily for parts, as in the NIXIE tubes. ZM1000 tubes aren’t exactly common these days, so having a few spares laying around seems to be a good idea.
I decided to at least take a look inside to see what’s broken. It doesn’t power up because the fuse is blown. That never bodes well, so I jumpered the fuse temporarily and turned it on quickly.
Yep, it’s got some problems. All segments of the tubes are lit, and the tab on the +5 regulator transistor got pretty warm being on for 5 seconds. Turned it on again to get some quick voltage measurements:
+5V Output (Emitter) = +0.8V
+6V (Base) = +2.6V
Measuring the resistance to ground:
E = 2.8 Ohms.
That’s not good.
A good unit measures (to ground):
E = 1.4MOhms.
+5 primarily powers chips, so I pulled all the ICs to start. Things changed, but not necessarily completely back to normal.
Good unit:
E = 1.4M
B = > 8.5k (charging)
C = Open
Bad unit:
E = 2.5k
B = 1.9k
C = Open
I started putting chips back in, the very first one I replaced (IC5) took the Emitter of the regulator transistor down to 3 Ohms. So that chip is bad.
However, there’s something else wrong. With all the chips gone, the +5 load should be negligible. I did a quick scrape on the transistors to see if one was shorted but didn’t find anything obvious. That leaves old capacitors that could be leaky. This thing is full of Tantalum drops and cheap-ass film caps, any one of those could be partially shorted and there’s no real way to know except to start lifting parts.
Since this is just a parts unit, and the tubes and driver ICs appear good, I think it’s just going in the parts bin as intended. Maybe if I have some snowy Saturday, I’ll pull it out and start lifting parts to see what’s going on. But for now - parts is parts, and parts is what it is.