I have two TSLs in just now with overheating problems. Sigh. A head and a combo.
I've been working on the TSL122 combo amp. Having replaced everything in sight in the bias circuit (details below) and installed two different sets of new EL34s I find it still overheats. I can settle the bias down after half an hour, then I leave the amp on and after about an hour the plates of all four tubes start to glow, and then no adjustment on the (new) trimmers will bring them back.
By that time the whole amp is very hot. Heat-related problem I thought. Took the chassis out and found that hot air applied to the general area of C36, C37 etc (bias smoothing caps and associated resistors) produced a drop in bias voltage, quite noticeable.
With the board good and hot the bias voltage was down more than 10 volts. Looks like a vicious circle of overheating going on. Tried the freeze spray on everything I could see, but that generated nothing indicative.
OK tried then to isolate the problem. Lifted the PI coupling caps, removed the link to the mute/VPL and the link to the opamp supply on the back board. Now it was a bit harder to produce the voltage drop by heating the board, but it was still there. Not so much current draw on the circuit I guess.
Anyhow I don't seem to be able to trace this down. So maybe I'm on the wrong track altogether. Any ideas? Or shall I just fit a fan?
Parts replaced:
output tubes
C6, C7 (post-PI coupling)
R67, R69 (220k bias feed)
C36, C37 (bias smoothing)
R68 (bias supply to ground)
C42 lifted - symptoms unchanged
bias trim pots
C43, C44 (bias feed caps)
C36, C37 (VPL/mute coupling)
C46 (plate-to-screen)
D7-D10 all check ok (bias supply bridge)
I've been working on the TSL122 combo amp. Having replaced everything in sight in the bias circuit (details below) and installed two different sets of new EL34s I find it still overheats. I can settle the bias down after half an hour, then I leave the amp on and after about an hour the plates of all four tubes start to glow, and then no adjustment on the (new) trimmers will bring them back.
By that time the whole amp is very hot. Heat-related problem I thought. Took the chassis out and found that hot air applied to the general area of C36, C37 etc (bias smoothing caps and associated resistors) produced a drop in bias voltage, quite noticeable.
With the board good and hot the bias voltage was down more than 10 volts. Looks like a vicious circle of overheating going on. Tried the freeze spray on everything I could see, but that generated nothing indicative.
OK tried then to isolate the problem. Lifted the PI coupling caps, removed the link to the mute/VPL and the link to the opamp supply on the back board. Now it was a bit harder to produce the voltage drop by heating the board, but it was still there. Not so much current draw on the circuit I guess.
Anyhow I don't seem to be able to trace this down. So maybe I'm on the wrong track altogether. Any ideas? Or shall I just fit a fan?
Parts replaced:
output tubes
C6, C7 (post-PI coupling)
R67, R69 (220k bias feed)
C36, C37 (bias smoothing)
R68 (bias supply to ground)
C42 lifted - symptoms unchanged
bias trim pots
C43, C44 (bias feed caps)
C36, C37 (VPL/mute coupling)
C46 (plate-to-screen)
D7-D10 all check ok (bias supply bridge)
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