I have a Labtec 2.0 with woofer speaker system (only bought it for $20 bucks a few years back) and it came with this 1 amp 15 volt linear mammoth. Its not the greatest thing out there but it serves its purpose.
As you can see its much larger than its switcher counterpart and heavy enough to break some toes if you drop it
.
Seriously I would think this billet of iron alone would cost 20 bucks
.
It has always run quite hot so I decided to open it and check it out.
This is what I found inside the circuit is pretty standard a bridge rectifier, capacitor, a fuse, and a resistor.
As you can see the PCB has turned black around the resistor this alarms me.
The heat resistant tubing around the output wires kind of tells me that the manufacturer was expecting this kind of thing.
I'm used to some minor discoloration but black tells me that this resistor is getting real hot.
Also I take it that the plastic surrounding the fuse was once clear and the heat discolored it.
Also what is this resistor for? It can't be a fuseable resistor because there is already a fuse.
I was thinking of upgrading the resistor to a higher wattage for better heat dissipation but then if it is some type of fuseable resistor I would be defeating its purpose.
Is this no big deal or something to watch out for?
As you can see its much larger than its switcher counterpart and heavy enough to break some toes if you drop it

Seriously I would think this billet of iron alone would cost 20 bucks

It has always run quite hot so I decided to open it and check it out.
This is what I found inside the circuit is pretty standard a bridge rectifier, capacitor, a fuse, and a resistor.
As you can see the PCB has turned black around the resistor this alarms me.
The heat resistant tubing around the output wires kind of tells me that the manufacturer was expecting this kind of thing.
I'm used to some minor discoloration but black tells me that this resistor is getting real hot.
Also I take it that the plastic surrounding the fuse was once clear and the heat discolored it.
Also what is this resistor for? It can't be a fuseable resistor because there is already a fuse.
I was thinking of upgrading the resistor to a higher wattage for better heat dissipation but then if it is some type of fuseable resistor I would be defeating its purpose.
Is this no big deal or something to watch out for?
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