Passing along the below to give an example of how to diagnose & fix a (simple) fault in a solid-state circuit.
I picked up a Urei 565T ("Little Dipper") for a reasonable price because it wouldn't pass sound.
Before buying, I checked out the
565T Manual and its schematic. I noticed that the filtered signal and Bypass path share some components: IC15, IC14, Q1, Q2 and T2. The previous owner noted it had worked the last time he'd used it, then it suddenly wasn't working the next time he tried it.
Before I even bought the 565T, I'd decided the check-out procedure would be to verify proper voltages at C95 & C97, then check the shared components for the Bypass path. After the main power supply, there are decoupling resistors and a local filter cap for every 4 IC/transistor stages. For IC15 (the input gain stage for both the Bypass and filter circuits), these are C5, C6 and R11 for the +17v rail, and C9, C10 and R15 for the -17v rail.
I get the 565T and notice all electrolytic caps appear to be the original units from the 70's. Nothing looked overly bad on a visual inspection (a good sign since solid state devices tend to fail in dramatic fashion; maybe I wouldn't have to buy any expensive, obscure Hi-Fi IC's). I considered powering up the 565T on a Variac, but decided if the filter caps were truly failed the fuse probably would have blown. And if they were gonna fail due to simply having power applied then I'd need to replace them anyway. So switch flipped on sans Variac.
I proceeded to measure voltage at C95 & C97. I got ~13v on the +17v rail, and ~-15v on the -17v rail. Could this unit need voltage-balancing resistors on the bipolar supply, or was there another issue to resolve? I thought I smelled a faint burning smell, but continued on to check the voltages on IC15. I actually did this the hard way by looking up the pinout for the LF356H, but quickly got confused when I probed where I thought V+ should be but kept seeing 0v.
Then I did what I should have to start, which was to probe at C5 and C9 after the decoupling resistors. I found 0v at C5's positive terminal. After powering off, I checked the resistance from C5 to ground, and got ~0Ω at both ends. Once I got a bright light on R11, what looked like a shadow cast from a nearby cap was revealed to be a burn mark around the middle of this carbon film resistor. My guess was C5 failed short, dropping V+ for IC15 and IC1-3 to 0v, and pulling excessive current through R11 to burn it. I couldn't rule out C6, but it was a small mylar cap and seemed less likely to fail than the electrolytic.
I clipped C5 off the p.c. board. A resistance check of C5 showed ~0Ω confirming it was bad. R11 surprisingly measured almost dead-on 47Ω out of circuit, even though it had as much as 3-6w dissipated in this 1/2w part when it was between 13-17v on the + rail and ground (due to the shorted cap).
I soldered in a new 100µF 35v cap for C5 (despite the schematic values, all the factory-original parts were 100µF) and a new 47Ω for R11. Powered up and first checked voltages at C95 & C97. They were now a few tenths from +/-17v and essentially balanced. Looks like the shorted C5 dragged down the positive supply and even threw the -17v rail out of whack.
A quick audio test confirmed proper function, and I buttoned up the 565T. Now it's ready for sale!