Sir Reddave101 . . . . .
the new problem I have is that now I have put in the new transistors, I get no screen whatsoever on the amp let alone the tuner, so it doesn’t come on like before and then start dimming until cap C114 blows. Now it just doesn’t come on at all.
Rgr Rgr on your two transistor types, in their having the same lead basing assignments.
Now . . . .
With all of the potential excess power drainage level that the main units VFL minus supply has been subjected to lately, lets see if possibly that
(con) fusible resistor R122 has blown open and gone open circuit, thereby giving no AC input power to your following regulator circuit.
Here is its schema, moved to below.
Go with your DVM set to AC voltage and be expecting a 50'ish volt level when your meter probes are reading between pins 1 and 3 of that purported W102 . . .10 pin connector.
Power up and expect that AC voltage, if so then move the pin 1 connection over to the B side of R122, from its just measured A side.
If no voltage there you need a common 1 ohm at 1/2 watt carbon film resistor to replace with, for then being able to continuing testing.
If things are then back to normal, your main power supply filter of C113 should be giving you ~50 ish volts negative.
Then you might have immediately noticed that units VFD is lit up, so check down at the end of the supply at -VFL (H) markup and see if it is now -30ish.
On the tuner unit, that mentioned filter initially placed across the -VFL power supply line input is:
Adobe document page 42
Connector PIN902 . . . . pin 8
C911 47uf @ 35Vdc E-cap . . . . .is connected across and filtering incoming -VFL negative voltage supply line.
Other relevance . . . .
Of minor significance is that past that cap the -VFL line ties into R941 a 330 ohm resistor (vice my erroneously mentioned 220 ohm ) which could only pull down the supply a mere 10 ma if faulted on its other load side.
Intermediately two 2.2 K resistors tap off some of that -VFL supply, but with those being even higher resistances, they present minimulist loading.
Go-Dog-Go time . . . .
73's de Edd . . . . .
Any time things appear to be going better, you have likely overlooked some things.
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