Thanks for the great story

ShaneWard wrote:
Its does not hold anything important
OK, and that's good for you, but also means it isn't worth much investment in time from me either. I'll just explain a vital point where you don't seem to have "joined the dots", which explains some of your subsequent problems...
ShaneWard wrote:
So I unscrewed the PCB board and discovered a small component (Black with a O written in the middle) had blown, from the searches on these forms, it looks like it might have been a fuse of some kind.
[...]
I have no idea why replacing a fuse was overheating the chip and components
Replacing the fuse didn't
cause the problem! You've got that the wrong way round.
Like in 99.9% of cases, fuses (in this case a fusible resistor) blow for a reason - so the damage elsewhere on the board (due to overvoltage, perhaps) had been done
first; then the fusible resistor was subjected to overcurrent and "blew"; then you replaced that resistor. However, the underlying problem (which causes the overcurrent through that resistor) hasn't been identified or fixed - so I'm not surprised that the drive didn't behave the same afterwards.
It
might be possible to fix the board, but likely uneconomic in terms of the time required, especially trying to do so remotely, and since you may have caused more damage by that slip of the multimeter probes (so we don't know how many faults now exist).
Someone might help you, but I wanted to answer your question of "why did replacing the fuse" cause those subsequent problems - it didn't; the problems had been caused anyway, and you just allowed the damaged component(s) to receive power again, by replacing the fusible resistor.