I have someone wanting me to fix their receiver and tuner. I am not sure how different it is from an early tube set.
I know the tuner is a TX-300 but I know nothing about the record player attachment.
Question She said she has the turntable parts but someone said the fuse was blown. I read that the fuses are special..
Can anyone tell me what fuse it is and if I can get it?
Depends. Do you mean a fuse in the turntable or a fuse in the amplifier?
I haven't heard of very many turntables having fuses, but if the amp has a blown fuse, you should try to get the service data for it which will give the proper ratings for the fuses.
Each stereo channel has two fuses (total of four, 2A each) plus a 2.5A slow-blow fuse for the line (mains).
So...go order some fuses. 1/4 x 1-1/4 inch, four 2 amp and one 2.5 amp slow-blow.
Away you go...away you go...away you go...
P.S. A word of warning: Do not run the amplifier without speakers hooked up to left and right channels - otherwise, you may blow some (or all) of the output transistors!
This is the first time I hear about output transistors blowing without the load....never had it happened to me while I was into building transistor amps. Do you know why?
People who do not drink, do not smoke, do not eat red meat will one day feel really stupid lying there and dying from nothing.
Funny thing about this stuff, tube powered can be fixed, most solid state is hazardous landfill. You can still get a decent turntable for little money on EPay. But scour the web for a schematics and information.
You would know more about this than I as you are an engineer, but...
From what I have read, transistor amps operated under a no-load condition can go into oscillation which can drive current high enough to fry (short out) the output transistors.