Hi William,
Thanks very much for the link, some good information here. This is what I've done so far:
On power up I got hot end: 17/200 degrees, bed: 17/65 degrees on the display. Moving the bed back and forward had the bed temperature change to 0/65 degrees intermittently. (No power to hotend or bed, just ambient temp registering)
Measuring the resistance of the hot bed thermistor I got Open Circuit or approx 130 KOhms but it was very difficult to hold the meter probes on the plug contacts.
I then swapped the hot end and hot bed thermistor connectors round. The display then changed to 0/200 and 17/65 degrees so the board electronics looks sound, the problem is therefore with the hot bed thermistor assembly.
After unwrapping the Y Axis cabling, it rather looks like there is a break in one of the thermistor cables so I reckon I'm stuck with a major strip down and overhaul but no spare parts should be needed. Here's hoping!
What I think happened to cause the problem...
During the coronavirus lockdown I've been trying to print off frames for face shields, The print isn't too complicated but it has a foot print which takes up most of the hot bed. (See below) I had to modify the .stl file to have the initial pre-print brim moved to 2mm from the print rather than 9mm as the filament was dribbling over the edge of the glass plate!

- Frame_1.jpg (148.68 KiB) Viewed 9179 times
Way back I made a cable strain clamp to prevent flexing of the Y Axis cabling (red arrow) but with the bed to the rear the cabling's been a bit tight. Most of my prints during the past couple of years have had a lot smaller footprints so it hasn't been a problem. I now need to strip the cabling out, find and repair the break and hopefully free off some spare cable length from the circuit board to relieve the strain. Then, with a bit of luck, we should be back in business!
Thanks again,
Soadyheid.