been repairing one of these, that was non-functioning after someone tried to power it by plugging it into their truck (don't ask). i know these are tough to work on, but i'm committed to it as a valuable learning experience, and the guy who wants it fixed got it for free, so there's no big loss for either of us in trying to fix it.
didn't try to start it up initially, but the 15A fuse was tripped and both the caps that see the direct AC high voltage (C16 and C31) were popped. so i decided to start with a complete recap, replaced all the FETs, and replaced the two finnicky bias pots with 20 turn pots.
started it up slow on a variac and dim bulb limiter, everything looked great at lower primary voltages (all DC voltages in the power supply normal at least) until about 90V input, when one of the FETs (Q12) shorted, and the gate resistor (R41) for that one started smoking somethin fierce. removing it and associated resistors from circuit, R41 still measured on spec, but i also found that the 0.47R source resistor (R35) measured about 1.1K! as i was stepping the primary voltage up, i was keeping an eye on the voltage across those source resistors, knowing that the target voltage is 25mV, but at the previous measurement spot (75VAC primary) i still didn't measure any voltage across any of the source resistors. i didn't get a chance to measure them at 90VAC primary before R41 started smoking and i had to shut it off.
my first question - i started the amp up with the bias pots turned to maximum possible resistance, as it seemed that should be the coldest bias setting. was i correct, or did i actually start it up at the hottest bias setting??
second question - if i was correct and did actually start it up at the coldest bias setting, do the details of this failure give anyone clues as to what went wrong? as mentioned, i'm pretty new to these kinds of circuits, but i can certainly see how R41 would be pulling way too much current with Q12 shorted (no resistance read between drain, source or gate in any combination), so it makes sense why that was burning. but i'm more confused as to why Q12 shorted in the first place, and what's up with R35 being way too high resistance... it was a while ago, but i'm almost positive i measured all the source resistors and they all measured correctly, so it seems that R35 somehow drifted up to that resistance value during the failure. but i've never seen a wirewound do that... in my experience, they tend to either keep their original resistance value, or fail completely shorted or open, not change resistance dramatically.
last question - does anyone have any references they'd recommend for understanding this power amp circuit? i'm a tube amp specialist, so this topology is pretty new to me. i've been recommended Douglas Self's Audio Power Amplifier Design and definitely plan to get it once i have the money, but in the meantime, i'd love to read something more in the order of an article or chapter on this particular circuit.
didn't try to start it up initially, but the 15A fuse was tripped and both the caps that see the direct AC high voltage (C16 and C31) were popped. so i decided to start with a complete recap, replaced all the FETs, and replaced the two finnicky bias pots with 20 turn pots.
started it up slow on a variac and dim bulb limiter, everything looked great at lower primary voltages (all DC voltages in the power supply normal at least) until about 90V input, when one of the FETs (Q12) shorted, and the gate resistor (R41) for that one started smoking somethin fierce. removing it and associated resistors from circuit, R41 still measured on spec, but i also found that the 0.47R source resistor (R35) measured about 1.1K! as i was stepping the primary voltage up, i was keeping an eye on the voltage across those source resistors, knowing that the target voltage is 25mV, but at the previous measurement spot (75VAC primary) i still didn't measure any voltage across any of the source resistors. i didn't get a chance to measure them at 90VAC primary before R41 started smoking and i had to shut it off.
my first question - i started the amp up with the bias pots turned to maximum possible resistance, as it seemed that should be the coldest bias setting. was i correct, or did i actually start it up at the hottest bias setting??
second question - if i was correct and did actually start it up at the coldest bias setting, do the details of this failure give anyone clues as to what went wrong? as mentioned, i'm pretty new to these kinds of circuits, but i can certainly see how R41 would be pulling way too much current with Q12 shorted (no resistance read between drain, source or gate in any combination), so it makes sense why that was burning. but i'm more confused as to why Q12 shorted in the first place, and what's up with R35 being way too high resistance... it was a while ago, but i'm almost positive i measured all the source resistors and they all measured correctly, so it seems that R35 somehow drifted up to that resistance value during the failure. but i've never seen a wirewound do that... in my experience, they tend to either keep their original resistance value, or fail completely shorted or open, not change resistance dramatically.
last question - does anyone have any references they'd recommend for understanding this power amp circuit? i'm a tube amp specialist, so this topology is pretty new to me. i've been recommended Douglas Self's Audio Power Amplifier Design and definitely plan to get it once i have the money, but in the meantime, i'd love to read something more in the order of an article or chapter on this particular circuit.
Comment