I am experiencing a fault 512 with my HP 5972 MSD. The fault results in the message “Difficulty in the Detector HV Supply”. I am wanting to confirm what replacement part I should consider first? The DC power supply, the power distribution board, or something else? If anyone has any thoughts, please let me know. I have checked all the connections leading to the electron multiplier and everything seems fine. All connections are also secure to the analyzer and the vacuum level is below 100 mTorr.
I’ve attempted to do the air/water check several times now in the diagnostics/vacuum section of ChemStation. Every time, I have been unable to turn on the detector due to the HV supply error, except for one time that resulted in the error “Difficulty in the mass filter electronics”. I’d like to start troubleshooting first with the detector HV supply error and move forward from there.
Thanks for any suggestions, I appreciate it!
100mTorr would be the vacuum between the diffusion pump and the rough pump, which should drop to around 30mTorr once everything is running well, definitely below 70mTorr.
Do you have an ion gauge for measuring the actual analyzer pressure? If that is too high it can give the same HV error, it should be in the 5*10^-5 Torr range or lower for best results.
I can't remember if there is a physical switch on the front inside the covers for a 5972 for EI/CI operation or not, I know they were present on the 5971. If the switch is there move it to CI, this will disable the pressure check which it does using the filaments and will allow you to scan even if the analyzer pressure is high.
If it is not a pressure problem, since you have errors for both HV and Mass Filter it could be a Top Board problem as both of those are controlled there. Look to the rear of the board, starting just behind where the RF Coils are housed and see if any of the resistors are swollen or cracked or if any of the capacitors have burst. Power surges can cause these to go bad and it will give you many problems.
Top board and Main Board both have several voltage test points labeled with +5v or -5v and other voltages which you can use to test if you are getting the proper voltages to the boards, if low it could mean the power supply is bad.