ELECTRIC SHOCK can kill.
Have an electrician install and service
this equipment. Turn the machine OFF
before working on equipment. Do not
touch electrically hot parts.
Sometimes machine failures appear to be due to PC
board failures. These problems can sometimes be
traced to poor electrical connections. To avoid prob-
lems when troubleshooting and replacing PC boards,
please use the following procedure:
1.
Determine to the best of your technical ability that
the PC board is the most likely component caus-
ing the failure symptom.
2.
Check for loose connections at the PC board to
assure that the PC board is properly connected.
3.
If the problem persists, replace the suspect PC
board using standard practices to avoid static
electrical damage and electrical shock. Read the
warning inside the static resistant bag and perform
the following procedures:
PC Board can be damaged by
static electricity.
• Remove your body’s static charge
before opening the static-shield-
ing bag. Wear an anti-static wrist
strap. For safety, use a 1 Meg
ohm resistive cord connected to a
grounded part of the equipment
frame.
• If you don’t have a wrist strap,
touch an unpainted, grounded,
part of the equipment frame.
Keep touching the frame to pre-
vent static build-up. Be sure not
to touch any electrically live parts
at the same time.
• Tools which come in contact with the PC Board must
be either conductive, anti-static or static-dissipative.
• Remove the PC Board from the static-shielding bag
and place it directly into the equipment. Don’t set
the PC Board on or near paper, plastic or cloth which
could have a static charge. If the PC Board can’t be
installed immediately, put it back in the static-
shielding bag.
• If the PC Board uses protective shorting jumpers,
don’t remove them until installation is complete.
• If you return a PC Board to The Lincoln Electric
Company for credit, it must be in the static-shielding
bag. This will prevent further damage and allow
proper failure analysis.
4.
Test the machine to determine if the failure symp-
tom has been corrected by the replacement PC
board.
NOTE:
Allow the machine to heat up so that all elec-
trical components can reach their operating
temperature.
5.
Remove the replacement PC board and substitute
it with the original PC board to recreate the original
problem.
a. If the original problem does not reappear
by substituting the original board, then the
PC board was not the problem. Continue
to look for bad connections in the control
wiring harness, junction blocks, and termi-
nal strips.
b. If the original problem is recreated by the
substitution of the original board, then the
PC board was the problem. Reinstall the
replacement PC board and test the
machine.
6.
Always indicate that this procedure was followed
when warranty reports are to be submitted.
NOTE:
Following this procedure and writing on the
warranty report, “INSTALLED AND SWITCHED
PC BOARDS TO VERIFY PROBLEM,” will help
avoid denial of legitimate PC board warranty
claims.
TROUBLESHOOTING & REPAIR
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F-3
IDEALARC R3R
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PC BOARD TROUBLESHOOTING PROCEDURES
WARNING
ATTENTION
Static-Sensitive
Devices
Handle only at
Static-Safe
Workstations
Reusable
Container
Do Not Destroy