F100 issues

Just got an F100 in what appears to be fairly good, but obviously old condition. When it first arrived, I tested it out, and it seemed to work beautifully. Took it to it's first gig (mostly just to try it out in practice, I didn't really need it), and hooked it up. It heated up fine, but the pump wouldn't run.
Now, back in the shop, I measured the voltage on the pump leads, and it seems to be 110VAC, whether or not the run button is pressed (timer is turned off on the timer remote). I also measured with a scope, the input voltage to the pump optocoupler. You can see a train of pulses when you press the Run button.

So, to me this says that the problem is either the SCR, the pump, or the optocoupler.

With the power off, the resistance across the pump windings is high, but not open (about 1 Meg).

What should the resistance of the pump windings be? Is this indicative of a bad pump?

If this is the case, does anybody here have a surplus pump they wouldn't mind selling?

I haven't really worked much with SCRs but I seem to remember they require a load to work properly, so is this why the voltage is 110VAC? Is the pump not giving enough load to the SCR for it to work? Or is this a bad SCR?


Thanks,

Jeff
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  • figured it out... bad connection to the pump... I must've reconnected the pump badly multiple times, because I disconnected the leads from the phoenix connector multiple times to test the pump, but this last time, when I reconnected it, it started working.

    Haven't tested the first board in the unit yet, but I believe it was a short that resolved when the trace burned (the burned trace has been cut out and bypassed by a jumper now, so no short exists anymore), in addition to the bad connection to the phoenix connectors.

    the strange thing is that I tested the resistance between the 2 traces that shorted, and they didn't seem to be shorted. Yet when I replaced the problem trace with a jumper, the problems went away... (no more burning parts or traces, but this still had the problem caused by the phoenix connector/pump connection).

    In any case, I have a working f100 now... and likely will have 2 soon...
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  • figured it out... bad connection to the pump... I must've reconnected the pump badly multiple times, because I disconnected the leads from the phoenix connector multiple times to test the pump, but this last time, when I reconnected it, it started working.

    Haven't tested the first board in the unit yet, but I believe it was a short that resolved when the trace burned (the burned trace has been cut out and bypassed by a jumper now, so no short exists anymore), in addition to the bad connection to the phoenix connectors.

    the strange thing is that I tested the resistance between the 2 traces that shorted, and they didn't seem to be shorted. Yet when I replaced the problem trace with a jumper, the problems went away... (no more burning parts or traces, but this still had the problem caused by the phoenix connector/pump connection).

    In any case, I have a working f100 now... and likely will have 2 soon...
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