Fluke 5725A User Manual

Page 137

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Troubleshooting

Manual Tests for Fault Isolation

7

7-7

7-5.

Problems 1 or 2: Fault at Power-Up or When Entering Voltage
Standby

Proceed as follows to isolate the problem in these conditions:

1.

If the 5700A is reporting a fault, determine if it is an analog monitor fault from
Table 7-2. If the fault is not in Table 7-2, skip to step 2. (See Table 7-1 for
explanations of fault codes.)

Table 7-2. Analog Monitor Faults

FAULT NO.

MESSAGE

209

5725 Current Heatsink Too Hot

210

Output Tripped To Standby

211

5725 Current Compliance Voltage Too High

212

5725 Current Compliance Voltage Too High

213

5725 +400V Supply Did Not Shut Off

214

5725 -400V Supply Did Not Shut Off

215

5725 Voltage Heatsink Too Hot

216

Output Tripped To Standby

217

5725 +400V Supply Too Low

218

5725 +400V Supply Too High

219

5725 -400V Supply Too Negative

220

5725 -400V Supply Too Positive

221

5725 +400V Supply Current Too High

222

Output Tripped To Standby

223

5725 -400V Supply Current Too High

224

Output Tripped To Standby

225

5725 Fan Not Working

a.

With an oscilloscope, check TP152 (DAC OUT) for the waveform shown facing
Section 9 with the High Voltage Sense Assembly (A6) schematic.

b.

If the waveform is present, suspect an abnormal analog input into U151 on the
High Voltage Sense Assembly (A6). See Table 4-3 for voltage limits of the
analog inputs for standby operation.

c.

If the waveform is not present, short TP510 to DCOM on the Digital assembly.
This tells the CPU to ignore all analog monitor faults and run all other tests.
Check for any new fault codes that indicate the problem.

d.

If the waveform is still not present, the High Voltage Sense Assembly (A6) is
likely to be at fault, specifically, the circuitry that includes U151, U155, U156,
U153, and U154.

2.

If not an analog monitor fault, is it a high voltage supply (Fault 234) or CLAMPS*
(Fault 226) fault? If yes and in standby mode, suspect the Power Supply assembly
(A4). If yes and in voltage standby mode, suspect the High Voltage Amplifier (A3)
and the high voltage output transistors.

3.

If the error on the 5700A is not an analog monitor fault, high voltage supply (Fault
234), or CLAMPS* (Fault 226) fault, or if no fault is reported by the 5700A, check
for communications activity at pins 12 and 13 of U507 on the Digital assembly (A5).
The waveform should appear as shown facing the Digital schematic as waveform 4.
If there is no activity, suspect the communication circuitry on the High Voltage
Sense Assembly or the Digital assembly.

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