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Keep blowing F 115

Ian

Registered
1 10 Years
Joined
Sep 1, 2014
Messages
23
Location
South London
I wondered if anyone can help with a problem I have on my scared stiff ,I have just replaced the flipper coils and fitted rebuild kits and now it blows f 115 the right flipper fuse when I turn it on it was all ok befor I changed the coils so I have put the old coil back on incase that was the problem but it still blows, any ideas? Tanks Ian
 
Sorry just reread your post. F115 is a 50v flipper as you rightly say check your wiring as you must have a short somewhere check your wire colors to the offending flipper and I can match it to my scared stiff for you. John
 
If you have replaced for new coils ensure there are diodes on the coil,if not you may have took summat out.also ensure you have wired it correctly,if you wired it wrong when coil replaced,but then reconnected the originals that same way that could be it
 
115 is a primary fuse. So suspect the bridge rectifier as short. If it was a flipper coil problem the 3a fuse on fliptronics would blow first. Disconnect power to fliptronics board and retry to confirm problem is local to the power board.
 
I have disconnected the power to the fliptronics and the fuse is still blowing
 
Isn't Scared Stiff a WPC-95 title where the fliptronics circuitry was moved on to the power driver board? If so how did you manage to disconnect the fliptronics board? Are you sure you connected the new coil in properly when you first fitted it? If you didn't you may well have blown a drive transistor on the power driver board.

If you haven't already, I would double check all your wiring is correct. Also try disconnecting plugs J119/J120 (which according to the manual supply power to the coil lugs/provide a path to ground respectively) and check the coil resistances and playfield wiring for shorts. If you turn the game on with those plugs disconnected and it still pops the fuse then theres something wrong on the power driver board, almost certainly a shorted transistor (Lower Right Flipper ones are Q90 for Power/Q92 for hold.) These are fairly easy to find with a multimeter (a good guide here: http://www.pinwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=Williams_WPC#Transistor_.22Quick_Check.22)

Although its possible, it would be a bit of a coincedence if you were working on the flipper coils and then the flipper coil fuse popped for another reason lol! If there is a problem on the board and you aren't confident with this kind of stuff you may well be better off sending it away for repair mind. :)
 
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