I saw that smoked 220 Ohm resistor on the display board. I had some of those on 200 Gen 1 amp also. Each channel has three of them that form resistor voltage divider for the display. I replaced them with "flameproof" versions. In my case, I traced the fault to overvoltage coming from the one of the amp modules. I was getting about 63 VDC on the ouitput line with no input applied. I found a number of things, including a brocked tracew and a bad ground. I had previoulsy changed output tnasistors, drivers, anfd the inverter transistor as well as 3 shorted diodes. I am not the first to work on this unit, and I am still not done with it.
I have output as seen on the LED meters for each channel, which tracks the input. The transistor do not get warm and there is a small offset voltage (blelow 10mV if I recall() on the outputs, under no load and no input. I will re-measure it again, and if okay, proceed with bias and stability checks. The protection relay does nothing yet - Apparently no voltage at the coil, but the diodes and transistors assocated with the circuit have tested okay. I also need to find a pair of 3mm LED's that need more power than Vishays' I got from Mouser. Two wer mecahnically damaged, and the replacements are much brighter, needing less current.
Stay tuned. I am getting close with mine.