I've been staring at this one for quite a while. It's a japenese-built solid state echo unit designed to take 8-track tapes - seems to be a few similar units out there with different rebranding (eg. Concert SS-110, Memphis Echo ME-8, Bruno/Hi-Max Echo Chamber). This one's branded as a Holden (classic kiwi amp company from back in the 70's).
The dry signal is coming through fine but the echoes won't work. I've tested & checked all the obvious stuff but am still stumped so I traced up a schematic, which should be correct, if not complete:
Holden Tape Echo.pdf
-The heads are all testing ok (no open circuits, low resistance)
-The dry signal comes through from both inputs and also if I run a test signal into the playback circuit
-Scoping a test signal indicates everything is fine up until the area around the last JFET/Record head
-the bias oscillator is producing a signal, which is present on the erase & record heads
-the two JFETs may not be original - looks like they were replaced with J109s and installed in the wrong pinout configuration. I subbed in some MPF102s that *seem* to do the job amplification-wise. Everything else seems stock.
The problem seems to be around the bias trap - the test signal is present at the FET output but not making it through to the record head, while the bias signal is also present at the output of the FET. I've tried to 'tune' the bias signal to minimize its presence on the FET output, but I can't eliminate it completely (~2VAC minimum). The test signal seems to be getting lost in the bias trap or perhaps completely drowned out by the bias signal by the time it reaches the record head, even with the bias pot set to minimum signal. One other crazy thing - I disconnected the 220pF cap to remove the bias signal from the record head and make sure the test signal was reaching it... and the bias oscillations still seem to be present, although at a lesser amplitude and riding on top of the test signal, as I'd expect. Reconnect the bias circuit and its 20VAC signal just wipes out any trace of a test signal again. Do I need more gain from the audio path or less signal from the bias circuit?
I'm pretty much out of ideas on this one so I thought I'd post it in case anyone has an idea or sees something that I'm not. Hopefully there are some tape echo gurus lurking about...
The dry signal is coming through fine but the echoes won't work. I've tested & checked all the obvious stuff but am still stumped so I traced up a schematic, which should be correct, if not complete:
Holden Tape Echo.pdf
-The heads are all testing ok (no open circuits, low resistance)
-The dry signal comes through from both inputs and also if I run a test signal into the playback circuit
-Scoping a test signal indicates everything is fine up until the area around the last JFET/Record head
-the bias oscillator is producing a signal, which is present on the erase & record heads
-the two JFETs may not be original - looks like they were replaced with J109s and installed in the wrong pinout configuration. I subbed in some MPF102s that *seem* to do the job amplification-wise. Everything else seems stock.
The problem seems to be around the bias trap - the test signal is present at the FET output but not making it through to the record head, while the bias signal is also present at the output of the FET. I've tried to 'tune' the bias signal to minimize its presence on the FET output, but I can't eliminate it completely (~2VAC minimum). The test signal seems to be getting lost in the bias trap or perhaps completely drowned out by the bias signal by the time it reaches the record head, even with the bias pot set to minimum signal. One other crazy thing - I disconnected the 220pF cap to remove the bias signal from the record head and make sure the test signal was reaching it... and the bias oscillations still seem to be present, although at a lesser amplitude and riding on top of the test signal, as I'd expect. Reconnect the bias circuit and its 20VAC signal just wipes out any trace of a test signal again. Do I need more gain from the audio path or less signal from the bias circuit?
I'm pretty much out of ideas on this one so I thought I'd post it in case anyone has an idea or sees something that I'm not. Hopefully there are some tape echo gurus lurking about...
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