I’m repairing an old TV with corrosion on the board. I’m having trouble reading the schematic from the manual. Here’s the relevant section: Image I have two questions:
Do the thick bars on one side of the capacitor and the base of the transistor indicate those are connected together? I’d tone it out but the board is heavily corroded and I’m unsure if they should be connected. I’ve also seen these bars on other parts of the board, but the components there are not rated anywhere near as high as C451. I feel like that risks high voltage backfeeding through the other parts of the circuit.
What kind of capacitor is C451, and should it be polarised? The BOM lists it as a pp cap which I understand to be non-polarised, but I can’t find any key that tells me what the dot on the symbol means. Let me know if I can provide any further information. Thanks
jeinzi@discuss.tchncs.de 14 hours ago
The horizontal bar is commonly used to indicate ground, meaning the part of your circuit you define to be at 0V. So they are all connected, yes. I don’t know anything about a capacitor symbol with a dot though, never seen it until now.
boaratio@lemmy.world 14 hours ago
I believe the dot on the capacitor indicates polarity, and you’re correct about the horizontal bar being ground, but a single bar means local ground. Some boards have both local and global grounds.