Originally posted by The Dude
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Fender Frontman 212r sound breakup and crackles diagnosis
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OK! I'm enjoying this scope thing, seems much more pragmatic than just having a multimeter and no real idea of how this circuit is supposed to work! Learning a tonne..
I've found some oddities all over the place, where the signal changes or looses shape or similar. The sin on the output has turned all sorts of odd at various different points, but usually with one half of the sin gone or wonky.
Signal at speaker output terminal
However it seems like the very first op amp is suspect, U6, sometimes it passes the sin ok ish, other times it looks like this, including the DC offset
So I'm gonna order one of those I think and then see what else I can find after replacing that...
One question,
It's not a worry, and the scope seems to work fine when testing stuff, and I can get it to go away. But on some time/div steps it shows two traces for the sin, one perfectly out of phase. On some settings it just flicker, in others it freezes like in the attached photo. The invert function on channel one is dodgy on this unit (though that said it does it on channel 2 two, and with two different sin sources). If this is just an old ratty scope then that's cool, it's not interfering with the job at all. I was more curious if it's more down to something I'm missing about a scopes function..
Cheers!
EDIT - sorry, they rotated as attached!?Last edited by OwenM; 10-22-2019, 10:34 PM.
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It's not a worry, and the scope seems to work fine when testing stuff, and I can get it to go away. But one some time/div steps it shows two traces for the sin, one perfectly out of phase. On some settings it just flicker, in others it freezes like in the attached photo. The invert function on channel one is dodgy on this unit (though that said it does it on channel 2 two, and with two different sin sources). If this is just an old ratty scope then that's cool, it's not interfering with the job at all. I was more curious if it's more down to something I'm missing about a scopes function..
You need to "tell" the scope via the trigger setting where to start writing the trace. For instance a trigger level of 0V is ambiguous as it could mean positive or negative slope.Last edited by Helmholtz; 10-22-2019, 09:40 PM.- Own Opinions Only -
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Originally posted by Helmholtz View PostThe double trace in the picture is a scope trigger artefact. A signal cannot have different values at the same time. Try to find a stable trigger setting (trigger source and level) to get a single trace.
You need to "tell" the scope via the trigger setting where to start writing the trace. For instance a trigger level of 0V is ambiguous as it could mean positive or negative slope.
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Hi guys,
so after looking around and getting my head HALF around what's going on, I've started to zone in on some stuff that I could do with some help on..
For now I'm curious about this; the TL072 op amp seemed to work fine (earlier...), and now has issues, quite possibly something I have done and not noticed perhaps.
I'm feeding in a 91mVrms signal to the power amp, The voltage on the + of C40 is confirmed 91mVac, no DC. By the time it's hit TP18 at PIN 7 on U6, its way off it's target 33mVac, hitting about 120mVac. The waveform is also a stretched lumpy sin now.
I put in a new TL072 I had and same deal. So, although I'm sure there's other stuff later in the amp to fix, I think first I'm looking at something around the array of R67 R68, C42 C43, D16 and D17, is that right? I'm not too good on OpAmps although I understand the principle roughly, but it seems to me like something throwing off the signal from one side to the other of one OpAmp has to be something nearby in this circuit? Maybe? Possibly?
Cheers for any help anyone can offer!
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Originally posted by g1 View PostDon't forget R66 & C41.
If all those parts check out, I would resolder them all.
(I know that’s probably not the most thorough thinking but it’s all I’ve got to go on )Last edited by OwenM; 10-29-2019, 02:14 PM.
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Originally posted by Jazz P Bass View PostBe aware that U6 is in the feedback path of the output. (pin #6).
Originally posted by Jazz P Bass View PostAlso the - speaker connection should not be considered as at ground potential.
There are those 2 .22 ohm resistors in there between it and ground.Last edited by OwenM; 10-29-2019, 05:48 PM.
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Don't connect any grounds to speaker negative. Ground all equipment to chassis.
If you are using a load other than the speaker, it must not be grounded in any way either.Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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Originally posted by g1 View PostDon't connect any grounds to speaker negative. Ground all equipment to chassis.
If you are using a load other than the speaker, it must not be grounded in any way either.
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I have a digital scope (Rigol) that I put to use from time to time, most often for measuring output power before clipping. In this thread there is mention of using the scope for observing crossover distortion when setting bias as well. I have to admit though I don't understand the general importance placed on owning and using a scope as indicated near the beginning of this thread. I'm sure there are uses that I'm not yet aware of so I was hoping you guys could give me some insight. I find I can do a hell of a lot with just a DMM and a makeshift audio probe. I generate test tones with software on a laptop PC. So what am I missing? I feel left out of the party!
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