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Lets try this again - I THINK these are the caps....bad ones are in front
Man, that is painful to look at
Yeah, to me that looks like bad cap(s). That stuff up top is kind or gooey? And the tops are bulged out? If the answer to both of those is yes, then I would say that you almost certainly have some bad caps
Now, it would kind of depend on how difficult it is to get to the bottom of the board. You would need a solder gun and solder-sucker or a desoldering station to get those caps off and replaced. I would most likely pull a suspect cap and put it on a cap meter to be 100% sure before I went farther.
If I'm going to that much trouble, I also might look at upgrading the caps while I was in there. You could put caps with higher uF rating, higher temp and higher voltage ratings, or exact same spec caps, but not lesser caps than what is in there. The problem with upgrading is that new ones might not fit.
Hey, while you're in there, replace all of those p/s caps. You don't want to replace "just the bad ones", then have more fail a month later.
If you don't feel up to the challenge, then I'm sure you can find a stereo or electronics shop that could do it. I can tell you that replacing bad filter caps is probably like 75% of their work, so it would be a snap for a pro to handle. It's just a matter of how much $ they would want. The nice thing is that you could have them give the entire component a once over while it's in there.
Here's a few pics I found a while back for a similar surgery on my 1206. It should give you an idea of the work involved. Honestly, the price this guy quotes seems about double what I would expect to pay for this work.
Parasound Repairs