I have three commercially made 400watt portable strobes, all of which exhibit the same problem. They run on six NiCd cells (7.2v) and charge a photoflash capacitor to 360v. Normally it takes about 6-8 seconds to charge from 0v to 360v. However, at one point the output was shorted and part of the boost circuitry fried. The cap itself is OK.
I mapped out the entire circuit, but for simplicity I have cut down the attached schematic to the boost section only.
I have replaced both of the high power transistors (Q1 and Q2) with near equivalent substitutes from Digikey. The original part numbers and what I substituted are both on the diagram. The 30A transistors (Q1) were definitely fried, on at least one of the strobes Q2 was also bad. I eventually replaced D1, D2 and C1 as well.
When powered up, the strobe charges the photoflash cap to only about 8 volts (or 72 volts for one of the strobes), then it looks like the two transistors go into steady state (non-saturation) and stop oscillating. If the cap discharges about half a volt, the circuit kicks on again until the voltage reaches 8 volts. Far short of 360v !!
Fortunately I have a working strobe of the same model. A scope trace of the working strobe on the emitter of Q2 looks like a square wave with a rounded top, maybe about a 15% duty cycle. When I put the scope on a nonworking strobe (same place) it looks a lot like a sawtooth wave, sharp dropoff and an almost linear rise.
I'm mostly a digital elec. guy, my knowledge of reactive circuits like this is very limited. I'm at my wits' end! Any ideas? Suggestions? I can post pictures of the scope outputs if that will help.