Blown fuse on chassis

did it work before? or was it condition unknown? cause the earth ground isn't going to do anything to it unless you don't have an isolation transformer. the presence of the 2 pin plug tells me no one can be that hillbilly to screw that part up :ROFLMAO:
Two pin plug?
 
The wire from the flyback needs to be re-routed more appropriately ,going to the fuse block, while its being looked at.
 
I don't think anyone answered your first question - how to remove the fuse. Are you talking about F901? If so, it is one of these https://www.arcadepartsandrepair.co...-25a-250v-axial-leaded-fuse-5x15mm-fast-blow/

You'd replace it just like a capacitor ... unsolder the two legs from from the bottom side. The new fuse will have the legs on it.

Some folks make up these fuses on their own by using clipped off capacitor legs and a new fuse. But if you have to order fuses anyway, just go with the pigtailed ones.
 
I don't think anyone answered your first question - how to remove the fuse. Are you talking about F901? If so, it is one of these https://www.arcadepartsandrepair.co...-25a-250v-axial-leaded-fuse-5x15mm-fast-blow/

You'd replace it just like a capacitor ... unsolder the two legs from from the bottom side. The new fuse will have the legs on it.

Some folks make up these fuses on their own by using clipped off capacitor legs and a new fuse. But if you have to order fuses anyway, just go with the pigtailed ones.
Kazoo thank you. I sent chassis back and he is actually going to put a fuse holder on the board so if I blow it I could just put a new one in. But I am studying soldering so I could do things on my own
 
I feel dumb asking why....but I can you explain this to me a little more?
that wire carries very high voltage/current so when you have it laying near or on parts the electromagnetic field generated by the high current can induce voltage fluctuations in the nearby low voltage circuits, potentially causing malfunctions or damage to sensitive components due to voltage spikes or noise, even if the low voltage circuit is properly grounded and this is why we have the note on the site reminding customers to route it and cut it to length before soldering it.
 
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