11-23-2021, 10:36 AM
Royce,
What you need to do is start with what you know. You have a wire that has one end hanging unconnected. The part that you know (or can quickly find out) is, where does the other end of this wire connect? It might be a tube socket pin, or resistor, or something else. Once you have that, look at the schematic (not the wiring diagram) and find that tube pin or resistor. This information alone might be enough to tell you where the open end of the wire should connect. If it doesn't, then start from the tube pin/resistor etc. and keep working backward to find whatever else it/they connect to. Mark up your schematic as you go (make an extra copy just for this), but eventually, you should be able to figure out the connection point for the open end of that wire.
I hope this helps.
Jon
What you need to do is start with what you know. You have a wire that has one end hanging unconnected. The part that you know (or can quickly find out) is, where does the other end of this wire connect? It might be a tube socket pin, or resistor, or something else. Once you have that, look at the schematic (not the wiring diagram) and find that tube pin or resistor. This information alone might be enough to tell you where the open end of the wire should connect. If it doesn't, then start from the tube pin/resistor etc. and keep working backward to find whatever else it/they connect to. Mark up your schematic as you go (make an extra copy just for this), but eventually, you should be able to figure out the connection point for the open end of that wire.
I hope this helps.
Jon