Mackie 1400i hot light on

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From the service manual.

1) "The hot LED lights to indicate that the amplifier has engaged protection due to heat sink or power transformer core temp"

2) "Extreme heat sink or transformer core temperature will activate OVER TEMP. U5A activates over temp if the LM35DZ detects temperature above 80 deg C.
Feedback resistor R137 rescales U5A voltage reference so that the heatsink must cool below 50 deg C before overtemp is deactivated. Overtemp can also be activated by the power transformer thermal breaker (via Q89). In either case, both channels are muted via D69 and D66."

Look for a fault around these components.
 
I realise the hot light is on immediately when it is not hot. My post above indicates which components may be triggering the fault. For instance check for dry joints around the LM35, check the base voltage on Q89 to see if the power transformer overtemp sensor is faulty etc etc. It is either coming from the power transformer sensor, the heatsink sensor (lm35 on main HS, or dry joint around there) or the opamp which triggers the overtemp. Test R205 to see if it is to spec and test Q91 also. Post some photos of the board (even the small ne) if you like.
 
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Found R205 on the small board on the other side of the amplifier board. R205 was open so I replaced it. I checked the transistors on the board and they tested good checked remaining resistors and they were good. Plugged it in and noticed the transistors Q89,90, and 91 area were hot. Amp is still in overtemp state. Have not found the LM35DZ yet and will check R137
 
Ok, R137 is ok

Unsoldered U1 LM35DZ and then resoldered it but this did no good. Could it possibly be bad? Checked pins 1, 6, and 7 on U5 have aproximately .14 on pins 6 and 7 and pin 1 is showing -15 to ground. I had unplugged the fan and thought I had plugged it back in again it kinda started and stopped several times and now doesn't work.
 

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I've dealt with this before - what happens is that the T-220 power transistor leads on the little PCB by the fan (fan controller board) BREAK !!!

Pull that board out and check those transistors - you will NOT be able to see this is situ.
 
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