Do you know how long it has been since these units were last used? I am wondering if there might be a small battery that retained their programming in memory and that the battery may have died... That is just a wild guess. Again, the schematics will tell us what to do next...
Very good guess, I think it’s been really long time I think 2 years.
But I ran diode mode readings on the pins and I’ve checked I have out of 5.4v but still not changing
And my potentiometer is good I’ve measured it.
Well, not having the schematic, or at least one for a similar model, will make things a little more difficult... But, not impossible. Continue to search for it, until you have it. Searching doesn't have to be your main purpose, or delay investigations, but keep after it. Have you located the manufacturer and contacted them, to try to get the schematic? Sometimes, they will share it with people that are doing repairs.
I need to take a moment and explain to you what we need, to be able to communicate... We need to be very precise in how we describe things, to each other... And, you need to give great detail about what you are doing... I will use your comments, as an example...
"Very good guess, I think it’s been really long time I think 2 years.
But I ran diode mode readings on the pins and I’ve checked I have out of 5.4v but still not changing "
You are not particular about how the battery is related to the pins, if at all... Meaning, did you find a battery, or a capacitor, that would power the setting memory, while the unit is off? Is this the pin that has 5.4V? If not, what has 5.4V on it? You said that the main output has the same voltage reading on the multimeter as on the displays... So, please explain this to me...
"And my potentiometer is good I’ve measured it." You say you measured it... Did you discover that these pots are analog, or digital. I am guessing analog, but I should not be guessing. If analog, what method did you use to test them, what were the readings and are the pots the same in both units?
Don't worry, we will get a rhythm to how we communicate. But, do give it some thought.
We are going to start testing inside the unit.
Electroshock, death, explosion and damage are possible. If you are not sure you can manage the testing correctly, get a professional to do the job. You assume your own risk. I am not responsible for anything.Now, back to the two pots... I'm still assuming they are the analog type... We are going to test them thoroughly... I want you to take these readings, on both units... Make notes...
Looking at the pot with the stem pointed at your face and its pins pointed down, we will call the pins 1, 2 and 3, from left to right.
1) With the power off... Look for the pot's resistance value written on the body of the pot. It would look something like "B10K." "B" is the type of pot. "10K' is the resistance. What did you find? Check both; they might be slightly different.
2) What is the resistance across the whole pot? This is the multimeter resistance reading from pin 1 to pin 3. Is this resistance approximately the stated value of the pot? If not, we have a bad pot.
3) Now, take a resistance reading from pin 1 to pin 2. Write down the value. Take a resistance reading from pin 2 to pin 3. Write down this value and add it to the pin1/2 reading. Does this approximately equal the stated pot value?
I really don't expect to find that the pots have failed, but we need to start somewhere and this will tell us if the pots are good.
Warning: The next test is taken with the power on...
I am guessing that the pots are controlling the base voltage of a transistor, or the gate voltage of a MOSFET. I am also guessing that they are configured as voltage dividers with pin 2 as the input, pin 3 as the output and pin 1 tied to ground.
If the pots look like they are wired as I described... For each pot, read the voltage value from pin 2 of the pot to ground. Tell us the readings. Are they close to the same, or are they significantly different?
We will stop there. Take your time and be extremely careful. Get us this information and we will move on.
I am going to give you a little homework (grin)... I want you to watch some YouTube videos on how power supplies work. I think that for the age of yours, they all worked in a fairly similar manner... Yours looks to be a linear (uses a transformer... is not switch-mode,) analog unit with a digital display on the voltage side.
The number one failure, IMO, in electronics are the electrolytic capacitors. Even if they have not bulged, or have not leaked, they can dry up and go bad.
Do some research on cap failures. We are going to need to find a way to test your electrolytic caps, later. Generally, for a unit this old, I would change them all out with a high quality brand, just as a matter of maintenance.
That's it, for now...