I have ab obsolete DAC box that works great, but the main volume pot is bad. Since its obsolete, the company that made it won’t
repair it, and I can’t get a hold of a schematic.
I know that the pot has 6 pins for soldering to the board, and its rated at 100K. With that kind of very limited info, is it
possible to figure out how to replace it with a better one that will not go bad in a year or two?
Its a crazy request, but I don’t know what else to do - these pots are very unreliable. When the box was being serviced,
I had the knob replaced every other year.
I have some experience with analog pots, and they are super easy to replace, but since this is an encoder, I’m not
familiar with 6 pins and what they do!
Hi,
can you provide us with hi-res pictures of the failed component?
Did the volume control act “stepped” (= probably a digital encoder) or continous (= probably an analog potentiometer)?
If it says 100k, it is most likely a classic analog potentiometer (= variable resistor) and not a digital encoder - in any case you should be able to find a replacement part when browsing the larger online stores like mouser.com.
Greets,
Peter
x0xb0x dual lin pot part @50k
http://www.ladyada.net/images/parts/50K-B.jpg
BTW pots turn at 270°, encoders are endless
Thanks for this advice. I thought it was an analog pot because:
-
Its rated at 100K
-
It only has 270 degrees rotation.
But the manufacturer gave me description of a pot with detents.
So now I don’t know what I have - why would an analog pot have 6 pins, plus
2 more pins for soldering the casing to ground?
I only know about simpler pots with 2 or 3 pins.
I’ll try to get a picture!
Look at juliens picture - same 6 pins plus 2 fastener pins.
As it is 270°, it is an analog pot, detention is also possible in analog pots, of course…
Could be a stereo pot which splits the resistor value for each channel = 2x3 pins plus two pins for better fastening the pot to the PCB.
Bye,
Peter
a detent pot has a switch at the very low end
e.g : a cheap radio receiver - volume is controlled by the pot and at the very low end, it is the power on/off switch
6 pins pot = 2 pots in parallel. usage : stereo or dual circuit
Thanks for all this help! I think I’ve identified what I have.
It looks Like a stereo analog pot, 8mm, with 3 pins for left,
3 pins for right. I should have figured that out!!
This was so helpful - thanks!