I have a client's amp in the shop at the moment that's used to drive drum stool shaker motors. While checking it out, I found very peculiar barking sounds coming out of my 15" 4 ohm test speaker (not having a drum stool to drive, while sitting on it), and this behavior only begins happening at around 110VAC...even at 114VAC. @ 120VAC, solid as a rock, and clipping is symmetrical, without the nastiness.
The test signal is 50Hz Sine-Random noise, 10Hz BW modulation from a Bruel & Kjaer 1027 Sine Random Generator, which in this mode yields variable-amplitude LF sine wave. The slope on the peak waveforms where it is clipping suggests not enough power supply capacitance...though I don't think that's the cause of the behavior @ 110VAC driving to max. The schematic I have is too blurry to make out component values, and I haven't yet obtained a clean copy from the designer over in the UK. I sent him the scope shots to see if he's run into this before in production.
I haven't yet gone back to the amp to fill in the missing information (resistor values, xstr types, voltages at all the pertinent junctions. The nominal supply voltages are +/- 40VDC. Looks like part of the circuit is on the threshold of being starved, and with just slightly less than nominal line voltage, the waveform distorts horribly. Not unlike a bad current limiter circuit, where when they clamp briefly, the loudspeaker barks horribly, enough to scare ya.
The test signal is 50Hz Sine-Random noise, 10Hz BW modulation from a Bruel & Kjaer 1027 Sine Random Generator, which in this mode yields variable-amplitude LF sine wave. The slope on the peak waveforms where it is clipping suggests not enough power supply capacitance...though I don't think that's the cause of the behavior @ 110VAC driving to max. The schematic I have is too blurry to make out component values, and I haven't yet obtained a clean copy from the designer over in the UK. I sent him the scope shots to see if he's run into this before in production.
I haven't yet gone back to the amp to fill in the missing information (resistor values, xstr types, voltages at all the pertinent junctions. The nominal supply voltages are +/- 40VDC. Looks like part of the circuit is on the threshold of being starved, and with just slightly less than nominal line voltage, the waveform distorts horribly. Not unlike a bad current limiter circuit, where when they clamp briefly, the loudspeaker barks horribly, enough to scare ya.
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