Hi Kundo experts!
I'm attempting to return my Kundo electronic to working order - incidentally it's one of the more recent models with a triangular shaped base and case.
The symptoms are that it won't run. I've had a number of this and the ATO type clocks so am familiar with all the usual mechanical checks (battery, suspension, movement, pawl, etc). I've successfully extracted the yellow plastic 'bobbin' (without damaging the case!) and am faced with what looks like pristine inners, with the transistor and resistor neatly packaged on one side and the wrapped coils on the other - I'd say it has not been opened previously.
I'm assuming my problem is either one or both of the 2 coils, or the transistor. So I have done some limited checks with a basic digital multimeter. I should declare at this point that I am not knowledgeable about electric or electronic components or circuits. So, looking at pic Kundo 3, a close up of the transistor, which from what I've read may be a TF65, I have called the wires from left to right, E, B, C. These wires may be the Emitter, Base, and Collector, but might also be the other way round as I did not want to dismantle the thing just yet.
I set the multimeter to the 20k ohm scale, and then took readings between the 3 wires E,B,C, firstly with the probes from 'plus' to 'minus', then readings with the probes reversed. So for example Test 1. was across E and B (minus to plus), then reversed between E and B (plus to minus). In this case the Table shows open cct E(-) to B(+) , but with probes reversed the reading was 0.221 Then the same for E-C and B-C.
My question therefore is; can anyone interpret these results to determine where the problem lies? Or suggest other tests I could do? I'm obviously hoping it is just the transistor, not the coils.
Many thanks
Simon

I'm attempting to return my Kundo electronic to working order - incidentally it's one of the more recent models with a triangular shaped base and case.
The symptoms are that it won't run. I've had a number of this and the ATO type clocks so am familiar with all the usual mechanical checks (battery, suspension, movement, pawl, etc). I've successfully extracted the yellow plastic 'bobbin' (without damaging the case!) and am faced with what looks like pristine inners, with the transistor and resistor neatly packaged on one side and the wrapped coils on the other - I'd say it has not been opened previously.
I'm assuming my problem is either one or both of the 2 coils, or the transistor. So I have done some limited checks with a basic digital multimeter. I should declare at this point that I am not knowledgeable about electric or electronic components or circuits. So, looking at pic Kundo 3, a close up of the transistor, which from what I've read may be a TF65, I have called the wires from left to right, E, B, C. These wires may be the Emitter, Base, and Collector, but might also be the other way round as I did not want to dismantle the thing just yet.
I set the multimeter to the 20k ohm scale, and then took readings between the 3 wires E,B,C, firstly with the probes from 'plus' to 'minus', then readings with the probes reversed. So for example Test 1. was across E and B (minus to plus), then reversed between E and B (plus to minus). In this case the Table shows open cct E(-) to B(+) , but with probes reversed the reading was 0.221 Then the same for E-C and B-C.
My question therefore is; can anyone interpret these results to determine where the problem lies? Or suggest other tests I could do? I'm obviously hoping it is just the transistor, not the coils.
Many thanks
Simon


