Recently I went to turn on my AVT-150 and the light on the main switch came on but nothing else; no channel light, no fans, nothing. So I did some research and discovered that usually the internal fuse will blow or one or both of the TDA7293 chips will burn out.
I then opened up the amp and tested the fuse and it's fine, and there were no visible burn marks on either of the chips. Upon further research I read about the r202 and r223 resistors burning out and sure enough they both blown. I also momentarily jumped each resistor and the amp would come to life.
So I replaced both resistors but, I failed to read the instruction on the PCB to space them 10mm from the board. When I plugged the amp in and turned it on it worked fine, then when I switched to OD1 the TDA7293 chip furthest away from the tube lit up like a Christmas tree.
My question now is why did the chip blow? Was it because of improper spacing on the resistors or is there another issue with my amp that caused r202 and r223 to burn out in the first place?
Any help would be greatly appreciated,
Chris
I then opened up the amp and tested the fuse and it's fine, and there were no visible burn marks on either of the chips. Upon further research I read about the r202 and r223 resistors burning out and sure enough they both blown. I also momentarily jumped each resistor and the amp would come to life.
So I replaced both resistors but, I failed to read the instruction on the PCB to space them 10mm from the board. When I plugged the amp in and turned it on it worked fine, then when I switched to OD1 the TDA7293 chip furthest away from the tube lit up like a Christmas tree.
My question now is why did the chip blow? Was it because of improper spacing on the resistors or is there another issue with my amp that caused r202 and r223 to burn out in the first place?
Any help would be greatly appreciated,
Chris
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