Hey, all. I recently purchased a beautiful Omega D5 that came with a slightly-less beautiful Chromegatrol power supply/timer unit. The unit worked fine to test the enlarger both at the seller's and at home, but very quickly stopped working. Weirdly it identifies itself as a 412-045, which is technically the 230v/50Hz international model, but it has a US plug and again, seemed to work fine on standard US voltage and frequency, at least for a little bit. Taking it apart, too, there is no second transformer, which seems to be the only difference between the two models, at least based on my reading of the schematics. I also verified that the lamp's filament looked good, and probed the lamp socket with my multimeter to make sure there wasn't 24 volts there. Still nothing.
So, figuring that it was a US model and the issue was definitely on the power supply side, I started to troubleshoot. The timers in these things seem to go bad a lot more frequently than the power supplies, so I started there. Based on my reading of the schematic, jumping the cables that connect pins 4 and 5 of the timer relay (or the connectors those pins attach to, E9 and E11) bypasses the timer circuit and powers the enlarger lamp directly from the transformer. Lo and behold, that worked! The lamp lit and I was already planning the Arduino-based timer circuit I could make if the original was too far gone. But it seemed to only work once--since then I haven't been able to get the enlarger lamp to light, even by bridging the same connectors again.
And so, at the end of my very limited solo troubleshooting abilities, I wanted to come here to ask if anyone else had any idea what might be wrong here. I know the simple and expedient answer is to buy a new one, but they're somewhat rare and somewhat expensive and most importantly composed on entirely off-the-shelf, through-hole components. I'd prefer to fix this one if at all possible, especially considering that there aren't too many more where this came from.
Anyway, any hints as to where to start with this? More than happy to take readings on my end and do what I can to verify hunches or ideas from folks. If it's useful, there's a high-res version of the schematic here. Thanks!
So, figuring that it was a US model and the issue was definitely on the power supply side, I started to troubleshoot. The timers in these things seem to go bad a lot more frequently than the power supplies, so I started there. Based on my reading of the schematic, jumping the cables that connect pins 4 and 5 of the timer relay (or the connectors those pins attach to, E9 and E11) bypasses the timer circuit and powers the enlarger lamp directly from the transformer. Lo and behold, that worked! The lamp lit and I was already planning the Arduino-based timer circuit I could make if the original was too far gone. But it seemed to only work once--since then I haven't been able to get the enlarger lamp to light, even by bridging the same connectors again.
And so, at the end of my very limited solo troubleshooting abilities, I wanted to come here to ask if anyone else had any idea what might be wrong here. I know the simple and expedient answer is to buy a new one, but they're somewhat rare and somewhat expensive and most importantly composed on entirely off-the-shelf, through-hole components. I'd prefer to fix this one if at all possible, especially considering that there aren't too many more where this came from.
Anyway, any hints as to where to start with this? More than happy to take readings on my end and do what I can to verify hunches or ideas from folks. If it's useful, there's a high-res version of the schematic here. Thanks!
