Studio Color 575 Won't Strike

I've got 6 1997 Studio Colors 575 I got used. Lamp hours say 7000 something and lamp strikes say 3000 something. The total fixture hours are OVER. They've been sitting unused but powered on for probably years. Cleaned them up and I'm ready to go, except...

On all of them either F1 or F2 on the lamp board is blown. Now, HES says it's a 16A Fast or Ultra Fast blow...depenping on where on the site you read. But the board says 16A slow. Since I couldn't find either, I went with a 15A Fast. Figured it was safe enough and they must be some wiggle room right? Anyway, I mostly wanted to see the darned thing work. Replace the cover, turn it on and nothing. Look inside again and the new 15A fuse is fried. Somehow I'd let all the smoke out. Replace with another 15A but leave the cover off this time. Hit the power and the fuse lit up like a strobe lamp. It was a very short show but as least I had light, right? :18: Oh wait, it's supposed to be light on the outside.

Based on what I think I might be looking at (I'm hardly an electronics guy) it looks like power comes from the wall through the switch then through the RFI filter and straight on to the board. Looks to me like the filter could be bad but what else? And what do I do next?

Any help would be huge. And I gave the history in part to help troubleshoot and in part to solicit comments on what other damage I might still be looking at. By the way the Vers is 39E, it's a 575S plugged into a 120v/60Hz circuit, and the boards look mightly clean...no burns, exploded capacitors or dust.
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  • I'm not feeling so happy right now.

    Found 2 good fuses and stuck them in one of the units. Turned it on a heard a loud buzz. :eek: That can't be good. Opened it up and found a bad fuse, a distinct smokey aroma, and what appears to be tiny circuit traces poking out of the back side of the board between the board and the heat sink. That's gonna cost me thinks.

    Next unit...no guts no glory, right? Two new fuses. Fire it up and no buzz. I can let my breath out now. Run through the self tests and I can hear the click when the lamp should stike, but no light. Open it up and both fuses are still OK.

    My plan when I bought these was to send them in for a factory or a qualified tech for a complete refurb. It still may be the wisest move, and certainly the fastest, but I just hate to go through the trouble if there's something easy I can do here. Plus they came from an install so there's no box or road case.

    I'm willing to keep plugging away at it because...well...$1100 worth of new lamp board (times 6?) is more than slightly motivating.

    Recommendations?
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  • I'm not feeling so happy right now.

    Found 2 good fuses and stuck them in one of the units. Turned it on a heard a loud buzz. :eek: That can't be good. Opened it up and found a bad fuse, a distinct smokey aroma, and what appears to be tiny circuit traces poking out of the back side of the board between the board and the heat sink. That's gonna cost me thinks.

    Next unit...no guts no glory, right? Two new fuses. Fire it up and no buzz. I can let my breath out now. Run through the self tests and I can hear the click when the lamp should stike, but no light. Open it up and both fuses are still OK.

    My plan when I bought these was to send them in for a factory or a qualified tech for a complete refurb. It still may be the wisest move, and certainly the fastest, but I just hate to go through the trouble if there's something easy I can do here. Plus they came from an install so there's no box or road case.

    I'm willing to keep plugging away at it because...well...$1100 worth of new lamp board (times 6?) is more than slightly motivating.

    Recommendations?
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