Usually after Cochella Music Festival & Stagecoach Festival in Calabasas, CA the broken gear begins to flow back into the shop. Among the casualties is this Aguilar DB 751 Bass Amp. I pulled the cover off, as this one had a prize or two rattling around inside. The prize was two halves of the ceramic housing off a 10W 4.7 ohm power resistor that overheated and blew the housing in half. This is the RC shunt network (4.7 ohm in series with 220nF to ground) following the LR output network on the output of their MosFET power amp.
At least Aguilar leaves copper on their double-sided PCB's, and has healthy traces everywhere. Though the fat trace between this 4.7 ohm resistor and it's 220nF companion overheated enough to burn the solder mask off, cooked the fiberglass below the copper, which is now soft and spongy, and, of course, broke down the adhesive bond. Circuit is still intact, while the cap is no longer a capacitor. The MosFETs (Exicon ECF20N20 & EDF20P20's, all TO-3 metal can) test ok, (being able to turn them on & off with an ohmmeter), and the only damage found is this network and the PCB area where they were mounted.
I sent an email to Aguilar, with photos of the damage, requesting the service doc's on the DB751 (I only have the doc's for the predecessor DB750). Usually, the common fault I find on the DB 751 is their 35A Bridge Rectifier failing. I'm guessing the amp somehow began oscillating, and the cap ended up shorting briefly? That would put the output current thru that 4.7 ohm 10W resistor and the cap. I didn't get any information on how the amp ended up on stage. I haven't yet powered it up, now waiting for parts, though concerned about the PCB foil damage & the fiberglass. I've thought about applying an epoxy underneath the foil to secure it, then insulating the exposed copper with some 3M Yellow Polyester tape, or maybe some of their Type 63 PTFE tape.
I'm not getting any resistance readings on the charred fiberglass in the region of the burn. I'm waiting to hear back from Aguilar as this is one of their amps, not owned by CenterStaging....one of the many companies that park their gear with us for industry visibility, as we mostly have major groups and artists flowing thru using our facilities as well as our supporting their tour needs.
Any thoughts?
At least Aguilar leaves copper on their double-sided PCB's, and has healthy traces everywhere. Though the fat trace between this 4.7 ohm resistor and it's 220nF companion overheated enough to burn the solder mask off, cooked the fiberglass below the copper, which is now soft and spongy, and, of course, broke down the adhesive bond. Circuit is still intact, while the cap is no longer a capacitor. The MosFETs (Exicon ECF20N20 & EDF20P20's, all TO-3 metal can) test ok, (being able to turn them on & off with an ohmmeter), and the only damage found is this network and the PCB area where they were mounted.
I sent an email to Aguilar, with photos of the damage, requesting the service doc's on the DB751 (I only have the doc's for the predecessor DB750). Usually, the common fault I find on the DB 751 is their 35A Bridge Rectifier failing. I'm guessing the amp somehow began oscillating, and the cap ended up shorting briefly? That would put the output current thru that 4.7 ohm 10W resistor and the cap. I didn't get any information on how the amp ended up on stage. I haven't yet powered it up, now waiting for parts, though concerned about the PCB foil damage & the fiberglass. I've thought about applying an epoxy underneath the foil to secure it, then insulating the exposed copper with some 3M Yellow Polyester tape, or maybe some of their Type 63 PTFE tape.
I'm not getting any resistance readings on the charred fiberglass in the region of the burn. I'm waiting to hear back from Aguilar as this is one of their amps, not owned by CenterStaging....one of the many companies that park their gear with us for industry visibility, as we mostly have major groups and artists flowing thru using our facilities as well as our supporting their tour needs.
Any thoughts?
Comment