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Jerome Halphen
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Posted:
Tue Feb 08, 2005 10:05 pm Post subject:
Sony Mini Hi-Fi Radio Station Memory Loss |
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Good day, Gentlemen,
I've got a Sony PMC-D307L mini hi-fi combo (AM/FM radio, CD, Cassette) which
is about 6 years old. It used to retain programmed radio frequencies for a
couple of hours or more during a power outage, but now any loss of AC power
wipes the memory immediately.
There is no user-replaceable backup battery, and i don't know if this unit
uses internally a Ni-Cd battery, a lithium cell or a 1 Farad capacitor. I
have no schematic either.
Any help greatly appreciated to restore this unit back to its original
memory retention performance.
Thank you for your help,
Best Regards
jhalphen at dial dot oleane dot com
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Guest
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Posted:
Wed Feb 09, 2005 3:38 am Post subject:
Re: Sony Mini Hi-Fi Radio Station Memory Loss |
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Hmm there's a schematic for a CFD-S38L in PDF format at:
http://www.promelec.ru/scheme/CFD-S38L.pdf
It uses the same mechanism as the PMC-D307L. It shows a 6 V, 4X AA for
memory backup .
Richard |
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Jerome Halphen
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Posted:
Wed Feb 09, 2005 6:34 am Post subject:
Re: Sony Mini Hi-Fi Radio Station Memory Loss |
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Hello Richard,
Thanks for the link to the radio/cassette schematic !
The physical aspect of PMC-D307L is in the shape of a shoebox standing on
end with separate speakers.
I can't believe though that regular (and possibly leaking) AA batteries
would be used for backup INSIDE a piece of equipment, and requiring
disassembly to reach them, when it's so easy to have a small user-accessible
hatch to locate the batteries. Did Sony do THIS !
Thanks again & Best Regards
jhalphen at dial dot oleane dot com
<spudnuty@lycos.com> wrote:
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Guest
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Posted:
Wed Feb 09, 2005 8:41 am Post subject:
Re: Sony Mini Hi-Fi Radio Station Memory Loss |
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I personally have never seen this unit but I'm pretty sure that the
memory backup batteries are externally accessable. It was the only
schematic I could find and I thought it would give you a clue as to
the location of a memory backup system. If you follow that trace out it
supplies B+ to the system chip which makes sense and would be the first
place to look for a cap that would be memory backup. (your discription
doesn't sound like a lithium )
Richard |
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