I just finished repairing a blown power amp B. Power amp A was fine and working. I tested every component in the PA as well as in the bias circuit (Vbe multiplier?).
On pg 1 of the PA schematic, Q203/204 were toast, and this was visible the moment I opened this unit up. I'm not totally clear on SS terminology but I believe this section of the circuit is the splitter, and provides the 2 out-of-phase signals to drive the PA. There were shorted mosfets AND many shorted gate resistors in the PA. I replaced all mosfets and all resistors (gate, ballast, feedback) in the entire PA. I also replaced Q202-Q207 on the previous page in the splitter/bias circuit. I also replaced R218, R219, and R222 which were all burnt.
Wow, these amps are a serious undertaking as far as assembly and disassembly. So that being the case I figured I'd ask for some pro advice at this point. I've finished the repair and reassembled the amp. I always use my bulb limiter when firing up a new repair like this, but I'm not sure that is sufficient here. This was a TON of work, and I don't wanna fire it up only to watch my work burn up and go down the drain. Is there a more precise way of testing such a job that is, more sensitive?
Thanks in advance.
On pg 1 of the PA schematic, Q203/204 were toast, and this was visible the moment I opened this unit up. I'm not totally clear on SS terminology but I believe this section of the circuit is the splitter, and provides the 2 out-of-phase signals to drive the PA. There were shorted mosfets AND many shorted gate resistors in the PA. I replaced all mosfets and all resistors (gate, ballast, feedback) in the entire PA. I also replaced Q202-Q207 on the previous page in the splitter/bias circuit. I also replaced R218, R219, and R222 which were all burnt.
Wow, these amps are a serious undertaking as far as assembly and disassembly. So that being the case I figured I'd ask for some pro advice at this point. I've finished the repair and reassembled the amp. I always use my bulb limiter when firing up a new repair like this, but I'm not sure that is sufficient here. This was a TON of work, and I don't wanna fire it up only to watch my work burn up and go down the drain. Is there a more precise way of testing such a job that is, more sensitive?
Thanks in advance.
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