Is this the D8b “rail cap” issue or something else?
Posted: Mon Mar 20, 2023 3:37 am
Thanks to several of the members of this forum, the D8b I rescued from my work has been chugging along pretty well for the most part. But with that said, lately the board has been acting very flaky. Sometimes, in the middle of a session, it will go completely dead and start exhibiting the symptoms associated with the rail cap failure; clicking coming from inside the board, various VU meters bouncing up and down rhythmically, and no output whatsoever.
More often than not, when I turn the board on after not using it for several hours (or several days), I’ll hear a faint click… click… click… and some of the VU meters faintly display up and down movement. The software doesn’t load past the main D8b graphic. Every time, I seem to solve the problem by unplugging the master power supply cable hock from the back of the D8b and reinserting it. The other day, I pulled the hock out completely and sprayed DeOxit into each of the pin holes. Once I do this, the board almost always powers on. On those occasions where it doesn’t, I unplug the power supply hock again and reinsert it. Then the board powers up. I’ve got some major archival work to do with old Mackie drives but I’m afraid to do it if the board is on it’s way to a total meltdown.
Am I looking at a rail cap replacement or is something else going on? I have everything I need to replace the caps, I just don’t want to do it.
Thanks for any help.
Aaron
More often than not, when I turn the board on after not using it for several hours (or several days), I’ll hear a faint click… click… click… and some of the VU meters faintly display up and down movement. The software doesn’t load past the main D8b graphic. Every time, I seem to solve the problem by unplugging the master power supply cable hock from the back of the D8b and reinserting it. The other day, I pulled the hock out completely and sprayed DeOxit into each of the pin holes. Once I do this, the board almost always powers on. On those occasions where it doesn’t, I unplug the power supply hock again and reinsert it. Then the board powers up. I’ve got some major archival work to do with old Mackie drives but I’m afraid to do it if the board is on it’s way to a total meltdown.
Am I looking at a rail cap replacement or is something else going on? I have everything I need to replace the caps, I just don’t want to do it.
Thanks for any help.
Aaron