I have a Carvin CX1272 mixer in for repair with channels 9 thru 12 being noisy. I figured it was something that is common to those 4 channels like a cracked solder or trace and that the circuitboard was grouped into 3 - 4 channel patterns but this is not the case. It looks like the channels are all discrete circuit patterns and not grouped into 4 channel patterns. I can find nothing physically common to those 4 channels outside of the common connections of Left, Right, Effects and Monitor which is common to all 12 channels. I have started signal tracing this noise with a scope and it is clearly visible when I increase the gain on those 4 channels, but I have not found a place where the noise drops out, not that I have done a lot to this end yet... it's a tightly clustered circuitboard with a lot of traces hidden under parts and a real pain to trace. Has anyone out there come across this or a similar problem and found the culprit?
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Semi noisy carvin cx1272
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Link the schematic.
I don;t know how it is laid out, but it still could be something common. Are all 12 channels on one board? Or is there 8 channels on one board and four more on another? That is common enough when a factory makes both 8 and 12 channel versions of a mixer. Then again, it is likely the last four channels would be part of the master board.
Scope the power supply lines of the affected channels, make sure those are clean. SOmetimes groups of channels are isolated with resistors.
Isolate the problem. What controls affect the noise and which do not? You have a 20db pan button on each channel, does that affect it? The channel volume? Does pan flip the noise side to side? Tone controls affect tone of noise?
And it is entirely possible those four channels saw some action and were damaged, so you might just need four new op amps
Ah, I found the schematic on the Carvin site.
CarvinService.com - Schematic FinderEducation is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Originally posted by Enzo View PostLink the schematic.
I don;t know how it is laid out, but it still could be something common. Are all 12 channels on one board? Or is there 8 channels on one board and four more on another? That is common enough when a factory makes both 8 and 12 channel versions of a mixer. Then again, it is likely the last four channels would be part of the master board.
Scope the power supply lines of the affected channels, make sure those are clean. SOmetimes groups of channels are isolated with resistors.
Isolate the problem. What controls affect the noise and which do not? You have a 20db pan button on each channel, does that affect it? The channel volume? Does pan flip the noise side to side? Tone controls affect tone of noise?
And it is entirely possible those four channels saw some action and were damaged, so you might just need four new op amps
Ah, I found the schematic on the Carvin site.
CarvinService.com - Schematic Finder
My current problem is that it's needed for rehearsal tonight and they can work with the 8 good channels with no problem so I've had to reassemble the whole thing again! This is the second time I've had to do this, the first time I got the effects unit functioning and cleaned out the cobwebs and insect cocoons lodged in the connectors. After tonight I get it back then disassemble it again and so on... phew!!!
I wish I could charge for all this time but this belongs to good friends and I'm doing them a favor because they are of course starving musicians who are perpetually broke... It's become kind of an academic challenge to me at this point.
I agree that it's possible that the 4 channels got smacked with the same failure from maybe plugging in some high drive device in one channel then it failed so with the logic of a musician they tried it in subsequent channels popping them until they finally gave up... I don't know at this point but checking the input stage op amps sounds like a smart thing to do right now because I don't really see any 4 channel groups of anything in there.
But that's for tomorrow's adventure, right now it's back together again and off to rehearsal. I'll keep you posted.... That's $1.00 for the chalk mark and $49,999.00 for knowing where to put it!
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I am not thinking so much a high level signal might have done it in. I am thinking more like some piece of gear with a grouind problem, had some voltage on it, got plugged in.
Do the isolation exercises I described. If the pad button makes the noise louder and softer, it is at or after the noise source. Same with ANY control that affects the sound in ANY way. Look at your schematic. The pad switch is right on the first stage. Look right after the first stage, the monitor send. Is the monitor send noisy too? That branch is before the tone stack. The tone stack appears to be an active stage using the second op amp. So if the gain pad button affects the noise, then that IC is suspect. If thsat has no effect, but the monitor feed is also noisy, that swtill points us at the first op amp. But if hte monitor feed is clean, but the tone stack affects the noise, then that second op amp stage is suspect. And if only the channel loevel control affects the noise, that localizes it to the third op amp stage. Yes, you could pick a channel and scope each stage, but these tests are just a matter of turning knobs on the panel, so it doesn;t even have to be disassembled for it. and it will tell you where the trouble lies.
Pick a channel and fix it. If they truly are all four individually noisy, then at least you might find a clue to the other three. On the other hand if there is some unforseen common element, then fixing one might cause the remaining three to fall into place.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Originally posted by Enzo View PostIf the pad button makes the noise louder and softer, it is at or after the noise source. Same with ANY control that affects the sound in ANY way. Look at your schematic. The pad switch is right on the first stage. Look right after the first stage, the monitor send. Is the monitor send noisy too? That branch is before the tone stack. The tone stack appears to be an active stage using the second op amp. So if the gain pad button affects the noise, then that IC is suspect. If thsat has no effect, but the monitor feed is also noisy, that swtill points us at the first op amp. But if hte monitor feed is clean, but the tone stack affects the noise, then that second op amp stage is suspect. And if only the channel loevel control affects the noise, that localizes it to the third op amp stage. Yes, you could pick a channel and scope each stage, but these tests are just a matter of turning knobs on the panel, so it doesn;t even have to be disassembled for it. and it will tell you where the trouble lies.... That's $1.00 for the chalk mark and $49,999.00 for knowing where to put it!
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If you have it apart, try some other op amp in there. Got some 4580 or even 4560? 2068? 5532 is a low noise part, yes, but you may find some more common parts as low enough in noise as not to matter. Try it on one channel and see. Might save a trip.
And I certainly would not sweat the difference between NE5532 and KA5532.Education is what you're left with after you have forgotten what you have learned.
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Well... got busy with some other jobs but finally got back to this Carvin, removed one of the suspect KA5532's and replaced it with an NE5532 and that cured that channels problem. It certainly looks like they blew out all 4 channels with the same problematic input device (whatever that was?)... probably some DI from some flakey amp or something. Now it's onto the other 3 channels. Carvin could not have made extracting those op amps any more difficult than it is, there's no room at all, it's the tightest packed area of the circuitboard... oh well, 1 down and 3 to go.... That's $1.00 for the chalk mark and $49,999.00 for knowing where to put it!
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Originally posted by Sowhat View PostWell... got busy with some other jobs but finally got back to this Carvin, removed one of the suspect KA5532's and replaced it with an NE5532 and that cured that channels problem. It certainly looks like they blew out all 4 channels with the same problematic input device (whatever that was?)... probably some DI from some flakey amp or something. Now it's onto the other 3 channels. Carvin could not have made extracting those op amps any more difficult than it is, there's no room at all, it's the tightest packed area of the circuitboard... oh well, 1 down and 3 to go.... That's $1.00 for the chalk mark and $49,999.00 for knowing where to put it!
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If the only section that was noisy was the line out/channel gain amp, it seems odd that an external signal or input could impact that but not its outside looking mic pre section in the first section of the first IC. The mic pre will be noisier but probably not audible and especially not when used with a live band where even the noisiest mic amp would still be 40 db down from the venue noise floor. The noise trace showed a dominate 500hz sine wave, did you figure out where that was coming from. IC noise is not narrow band, more Gaussian
Next time you are into it, if you are concerned, change them to 5532 not due to the noise alone but due to the 5532 has a few specs that make it more suited to the front end application. If not, no one is going to notice or care. It is an excellent device for many audio applications if its input current is paid attention to. A 4580 would be cheaper and also be quite good for that application.
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