Hi All,
Am trying to troubleshoot a friend's 212R.
Hope this isn't too long-winded...
I've built several pedals and fixed a few solid state amps for friends,
but this is more complex than what I've done before.
The problem is in the power amp. Pretty sure.
Hooked the pre-out to an old receiver and used it to drive the speakers.
No problems after several checks this way over a week.
But an intermittent problem in the power amp. It might be fine when first powered
up or it might not. Sometimes cranking it up will make it act up.
This is where I'm at...
I set the amp up with a 3mV 1kHz sine wave into J1 with a 4ohm dummy load.
per schematic instructions.
The signal is good out of the TL072 op amp into the differential amp.
When it's acting up the output is a half wave rectified waveform at the
dummy load.
At the emitters of Q9 & Q10, or below at the junction of R85 & R86
it's always sine wave. (The scope is the Conar 255 I built 30 years ago in tech school !)
Checked DC voltages and found that when it's not acting up bias voltages seem ok.
When it's acting up there is approx +0.5vdc shift.
Checked DC voltages and put them on the schematic. Seems the bias point is shifting
What's got me stalled is that I've found that any attempt to check D24 voltages will
snap the bias voltages back - cathode or anode, touching the probe to either and
the wave form at the output goes from half wave rectifier to sine wave but not
vice-versa. And the amp will work well... until the next time.
R88 and R90 and the base collector caps seem pretty warm when it's operating
correctly and cool when it's acting up. Not hot enough to blister, but definitely uncomfortable.
The data sheet gives 150C max temp so this might be ok...don't have that much
experience with this stuff.
Re flowed the solder joints... if this is non lead solder - it sucks bigtime!
Am thinking about getting out the solder sucker and replacing it with the good stuff.
So I'm thinking it could be D24 or one the others, any one of 14 transistors. cap
or an offset in the differential amp.
The power supply rails don't seem to have ripple etc and the voltages are pretty
much constant
Can't help thinking I'm missing something obvious.
For now I've still got all my hair.
Am trying to troubleshoot a friend's 212R.
Hope this isn't too long-winded...
I've built several pedals and fixed a few solid state amps for friends,
but this is more complex than what I've done before.
The problem is in the power amp. Pretty sure.
Hooked the pre-out to an old receiver and used it to drive the speakers.
No problems after several checks this way over a week.
But an intermittent problem in the power amp. It might be fine when first powered
up or it might not. Sometimes cranking it up will make it act up.
This is where I'm at...
I set the amp up with a 3mV 1kHz sine wave into J1 with a 4ohm dummy load.
per schematic instructions.
The signal is good out of the TL072 op amp into the differential amp.
When it's acting up the output is a half wave rectified waveform at the
dummy load.
At the emitters of Q9 & Q10, or below at the junction of R85 & R86
it's always sine wave. (The scope is the Conar 255 I built 30 years ago in tech school !)
Checked DC voltages and found that when it's not acting up bias voltages seem ok.
When it's acting up there is approx +0.5vdc shift.
Checked DC voltages and put them on the schematic. Seems the bias point is shifting
What's got me stalled is that I've found that any attempt to check D24 voltages will
snap the bias voltages back - cathode or anode, touching the probe to either and
the wave form at the output goes from half wave rectifier to sine wave but not
vice-versa. And the amp will work well... until the next time.
R88 and R90 and the base collector caps seem pretty warm when it's operating
correctly and cool when it's acting up. Not hot enough to blister, but definitely uncomfortable.
The data sheet gives 150C max temp so this might be ok...don't have that much
experience with this stuff.
Re flowed the solder joints... if this is non lead solder - it sucks bigtime!
Am thinking about getting out the solder sucker and replacing it with the good stuff.
So I'm thinking it could be D24 or one the others, any one of 14 transistors. cap
or an offset in the differential amp.
The power supply rails don't seem to have ripple etc and the voltages are pretty
much constant
Can't help thinking I'm missing something obvious.
For now I've still got all my hair.
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