Hi there,
As usual, I've been totally stumped by an issue with a solid state Vox Venue Lead 30. Here's the schematic 1st off:
Vox Venue Lead 30.pdf
It came to me with the outputs blown (2x 40871's, 1xBC300, 1xBC303) and the BC550 connected to those had cracked from excessive heat and was testing shorted. The sole BC212 tested bad as well. I replaced all 5 of the BC550's and the BC212 but the rest are out of production so the best equivalents I could find were BD139 (for the BC300) and BD140 (for the BC303) and TIP41C's for outputs, which the schematic says are acceptable alternatives. While I was waiting on parts, I tested all the resistors in the output section- everything tested fine but I replaced the 0.5R, 680R, 68R, 100R, 1K5 and 1K2 resistors just to be safe. The 2 serial diodes are testing fine (diode test on meter) and the ground connections are okay.
So after replacing pretty much all of the resistors and transistors in the output section, I fired it up with a lightbulb test and it wasn't drawing excessive current so I began VDC measurements. The rails are both reading about right, if not a little high: +/-34V but there's +21VDC on the output with no load connected. Measuring the Vec of the outputs shows that the upper one is dropping 10.5V while the lower is dropping 53V. Likewise for the BD139 and BD140 (same drop on each). So I reckon the lower TIP41C is conducting too much or the upper one not enough. Does this reasoning make sense?
Any ideas on why the huge voltage on the output? +21V seems like a lot so I suspect one of my 'substitutes' is not a true equivalent. I matched them for Hfe and maximum voltage, current and wattage ratings, but I'm not familiar enough with transistors to see if there's another parameter which is causing the problem. Instead of the BD139 and BD140, I also tried a BC462 and a 2N1893 (although the latter is not a great match for Hfe, max V, Ic or Pd) but regardless- I had the same result: +21VDC on the output.
Since I don't have any original voltages to go on (other than the rails), I'm not sure how to carry on troubleshooting. Any help would be greatly appreciated, please!
Thanks in advance,
Jaret
As usual, I've been totally stumped by an issue with a solid state Vox Venue Lead 30. Here's the schematic 1st off:
Vox Venue Lead 30.pdf
It came to me with the outputs blown (2x 40871's, 1xBC300, 1xBC303) and the BC550 connected to those had cracked from excessive heat and was testing shorted. The sole BC212 tested bad as well. I replaced all 5 of the BC550's and the BC212 but the rest are out of production so the best equivalents I could find were BD139 (for the BC300) and BD140 (for the BC303) and TIP41C's for outputs, which the schematic says are acceptable alternatives. While I was waiting on parts, I tested all the resistors in the output section- everything tested fine but I replaced the 0.5R, 680R, 68R, 100R, 1K5 and 1K2 resistors just to be safe. The 2 serial diodes are testing fine (diode test on meter) and the ground connections are okay.
So after replacing pretty much all of the resistors and transistors in the output section, I fired it up with a lightbulb test and it wasn't drawing excessive current so I began VDC measurements. The rails are both reading about right, if not a little high: +/-34V but there's +21VDC on the output with no load connected. Measuring the Vec of the outputs shows that the upper one is dropping 10.5V while the lower is dropping 53V. Likewise for the BD139 and BD140 (same drop on each). So I reckon the lower TIP41C is conducting too much or the upper one not enough. Does this reasoning make sense?
Any ideas on why the huge voltage on the output? +21V seems like a lot so I suspect one of my 'substitutes' is not a true equivalent. I matched them for Hfe and maximum voltage, current and wattage ratings, but I'm not familiar enough with transistors to see if there's another parameter which is causing the problem. Instead of the BD139 and BD140, I also tried a BC462 and a 2N1893 (although the latter is not a great match for Hfe, max V, Ic or Pd) but regardless- I had the same result: +21VDC on the output.
Since I don't have any original voltages to go on (other than the rails), I'm not sure how to carry on troubleshooting. Any help would be greatly appreciated, please!
Thanks in advance,
Jaret
Comment