I have an Ampeg BA115HP in for repair… complaint is that it's dead. The customer told me that he brought it into another well respected shop a few weeks ago and they fixed it with the same complaint and it worked for about a week before it blew again. He did not want to bring it back to them so it came to me. I went through it and several things were bizarre. Before I get started, here's the schematic:
457SCH_0.pdf
First it had a 3 amp fuse, 120VAC 60Hz calls for a 4 amp fuse. Power FET's Q8 and Q2 were shorted… the ones removed in the following picture. Most bizarre was the primary wiring for the power transformer… it was just WRONG!!! It was some mismatch of 240 volt wiring but not exactly, it actually looked randomly wired as if someone was in there mucking around and forgot which wires went where.
First I put in a 4 amp SB fuse and replaced Q8 and Q2, actually I replace all 4 output FET's… they're cheap. I tested the power resistors, diodes and driver transistors, all looked good so I wired the transformer up according to the schematic and before I hooked up the secondaries I tested the scheme which worked correctly now it gave me a little under 100 volts AC at the secondary, that's what it should be. After attaching the secondary I ramped up the variac slowly and everything looked good, as I ramped up it exhibited some small millisecond voltage drops but that settled down the higher the voltage got. I attributed that to flakey contacts in my well used variac. Once up to 120 volts I shot a sine wave into the input and got a bigger sine wave out of the output, pretty much what you would expect. I had not set the quiescent current yet but on the scope I noticed something a little strange with the waveform.
The crossover distortion artifact was way up from the mid point and there was a little notch at the peak of the positive going portion of the wave. I hooked up to the .33 ohm 10 watt source resistors as instructed and I should adjust the trimmer for 10 millivolts. Problem here was I could not read any millivolts at all. I decided to tweak the quiescent current trimmer anyway and I could see the crossover distortion increasing and decreasing, all of a sudden SNAP!!! My variac fuse blew. It's a 5 amp fuse and the amp has a 4 amp fuse which didn't blow… whatever. Post mortem is that the same power FET's blew… Q8 and Q2. Now I know you might say: "why didn't you use your current limiter" and at first I did but it limits at 2 amps max and hampers the proper operation of this 4 amp amp, so I bypassed it… whoops!, it looked like it was OK to go straight on the mains, guess I was wrong about that.
There's something taking these two FET's out and I believe it has something to do with that strange output waveform, problem is as to what could be wrong… any ideas?
457SCH_0.pdf
First it had a 3 amp fuse, 120VAC 60Hz calls for a 4 amp fuse. Power FET's Q8 and Q2 were shorted… the ones removed in the following picture. Most bizarre was the primary wiring for the power transformer… it was just WRONG!!! It was some mismatch of 240 volt wiring but not exactly, it actually looked randomly wired as if someone was in there mucking around and forgot which wires went where.
First I put in a 4 amp SB fuse and replaced Q8 and Q2, actually I replace all 4 output FET's… they're cheap. I tested the power resistors, diodes and driver transistors, all looked good so I wired the transformer up according to the schematic and before I hooked up the secondaries I tested the scheme which worked correctly now it gave me a little under 100 volts AC at the secondary, that's what it should be. After attaching the secondary I ramped up the variac slowly and everything looked good, as I ramped up it exhibited some small millisecond voltage drops but that settled down the higher the voltage got. I attributed that to flakey contacts in my well used variac. Once up to 120 volts I shot a sine wave into the input and got a bigger sine wave out of the output, pretty much what you would expect. I had not set the quiescent current yet but on the scope I noticed something a little strange with the waveform.
The crossover distortion artifact was way up from the mid point and there was a little notch at the peak of the positive going portion of the wave. I hooked up to the .33 ohm 10 watt source resistors as instructed and I should adjust the trimmer for 10 millivolts. Problem here was I could not read any millivolts at all. I decided to tweak the quiescent current trimmer anyway and I could see the crossover distortion increasing and decreasing, all of a sudden SNAP!!! My variac fuse blew. It's a 5 amp fuse and the amp has a 4 amp fuse which didn't blow… whatever. Post mortem is that the same power FET's blew… Q8 and Q2. Now I know you might say: "why didn't you use your current limiter" and at first I did but it limits at 2 amps max and hampers the proper operation of this 4 amp amp, so I bypassed it… whoops!, it looked like it was OK to go straight on the mains, guess I was wrong about that.
There's something taking these two FET's out and I believe it has something to do with that strange output waveform, problem is as to what could be wrong… any ideas?
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