Follow post #39Replaced PN8024R, but that didn't fix the thing...
So voltage on these two pins is around 28.8, and it's kinda dancing like 28.7 to 28.8...Follow post #39

The regulator could be outputting a low voltage - enough to beep but not enough to do anything useful... or a higher voltage, which means possibly the board is fried and all it can do is beep.What I see, it's that there is ma voltage for AMS1117 3.3V is 15V, but the pins output ~28V... so could that be the issue, but then, wouldn't AMS1117 just burn out, or break, and the board wouldn't continuesly beep?
The control board works fine on 9V battery, that's why I'm confused. But when I connect those 2 pins to the power board it just beeps repeatedly.The regulator could be outputting a low voltage - enough to beep but not enough to do anything useful... or a higher voltage, which means possibly the board is fried and all it can do is beep.
Its switching quickly from 10V to 20VCheck the output of the regulator, is it 3.3v?
Ouch, you're lucky the downstream MCU etc are still alive, but not for much longer I suspect, that'll be stressing them badly. Clearly the regulator is unhappy with that input voltage; it's in some strange world of its own. You need to check it with a 12v input from a wall-wart or LiPo battery pack that has sufficient current delivery capability, around 1A should do it, to see if it is actually working ok.Its switching quickly from 10V to 20V
But I can't figure out what the issue is.Ouch, you're lucky the downstream MCU etc are still alive, but not for much longer I suspect, that'll be stressing them badly. Clearly the regulator is unhappy with that input voltage; it's in some strange world of its own. You need to check it with a 12v input from a wall-wart or LiPo battery pack that has sufficient current delivery capability, around 1A should do it, to see if it is actually working ok.
Soo, I measured in DC mode:Measure voltages:
X-X on AC volts (>90V expected, take care )
A-G, B-G, C-G on DC Volts (probes as colour shown).
(>90v, >90v, <20v)
View attachment 363582
I replaced all electrolytic capacitors, I don't have replacement for the green one, but I will find it somewhere hope sohmmm - I think one of those capacitors below the IC is breaking down... most likely the green one, but I'd probably replace all three to be sure.
Replaced Green one, its still the same issue, still getting 28V for the control boardhmmm - I think one of those capacitors below the IC is breaking down... most likely the green one, but I'd probably replace all three to be sure.
Yes, but yours is more like the reference circuit earlier in the datasheet, and exactly the one I drew from your circuit board in post #22I have also found this typical circuit for PN8024R:
View attachment 363868
Yeah, I am trying to figure out why is it going above 12V when PN8024R should output 12V, not above it, but im getting like 28V...Yes, but yours is more like the reference circuit earlier in the datasheet, and exactly the one I drew from your circuit board in post #22
Do you have an LCR meter to measure inductance? The only other reason for the output being wrong, assuming the chip isn't faulty, is a wrong inductor value - maybe it has an internal short.Yeah, I am trying to figure out why is it going above 12V when PN8024R should output 12V, not above it, but im getting like 28V...