Hi everyone! My first post on this forum while I repair a bass amp for a friend.
Maybe a little introduction to the story could help to understand the blowing fuses.
Thoses amps seems blowing because bad thermal junctions causing overheating. In fact the thermal paste was complete dry on the NTC and no longer in contact with the heatsink. In addition to that all transistors were shorted causing main fuse to melt.
I also thought 330mOhm resistors were shorted but I realize that my tools are not enough precise to make proof of that.
I did replace all the transistors and resistors too. I did also put a clip to hold the NTC on the heatsink and put new thermal paste everywhere.
On the first try it did almost work. No blowing fuse but very pronounced noisy/distorted sound. My first suspect was bad resistor type because I took carbon ones. So replaced them with metal-film ones. No sound. After a bit of head-scratching I realized that I omitted the "0" before the "R" on the schematic meaning that the resistors were 10x grater than normal. OK! new ones. Nice Clean Big Fat Sound!!! Oh yeah baby!!! Jammin jammin jammin FUSE BLOWN; tears... I took it back home and after blowing some more fuses I fried the transistors again.
First there were only one pair of them shorted out on every pin and after removing them the sound was back. Sadly that didn't last very long when I turned the volume up the fuses blow again and the remaining transistors died shorted on all pins.
No I am at the exact same point here I started making me thinking of the process of resolving this issue. I could just have made it worse and I am at the limit of my understanding of the circuitry. I barely know the basic principle of this type of amp. What I see as an H-bridge class D amp. But I am not sure. If so, there is a control circuitry that may have been affected by those over-currents.
I am not sure very sure what to do next and I hope someone could suggest some components to test or an other methodology to apply. I read about light-bulb limiter. I don't have the right components at this time.
What I will do next unless someone tell me not to is to test power supply on the remaining components. But I am not sure what to expect. And what risk for other components if I turn it on without the transistors. I doubt there is any but at this point i prefer keep thinking about it and look for help. I could also track the signal path by an oscilloscope if that could also be a good solution.
I am also aware of detailed functional documentation about this type of amp. What I have found was not very revealing to me.
Thank you for reading hope it was not too much of a pain!
I replaced R2, R3, R6, R20, R33, R34 and TR1, TR4,TR6, TR7, TR13, TR19, TR21, TR22
Schematic:
https://music-electronics-forum.com/...0&d=1394892610
Maybe a little introduction to the story could help to understand the blowing fuses.
Thoses amps seems blowing because bad thermal junctions causing overheating. In fact the thermal paste was complete dry on the NTC and no longer in contact with the heatsink. In addition to that all transistors were shorted causing main fuse to melt.
I also thought 330mOhm resistors were shorted but I realize that my tools are not enough precise to make proof of that.
I did replace all the transistors and resistors too. I did also put a clip to hold the NTC on the heatsink and put new thermal paste everywhere.
On the first try it did almost work. No blowing fuse but very pronounced noisy/distorted sound. My first suspect was bad resistor type because I took carbon ones. So replaced them with metal-film ones. No sound. After a bit of head-scratching I realized that I omitted the "0" before the "R" on the schematic meaning that the resistors were 10x grater than normal. OK! new ones. Nice Clean Big Fat Sound!!! Oh yeah baby!!! Jammin jammin jammin FUSE BLOWN; tears... I took it back home and after blowing some more fuses I fried the transistors again.
First there were only one pair of them shorted out on every pin and after removing them the sound was back. Sadly that didn't last very long when I turned the volume up the fuses blow again and the remaining transistors died shorted on all pins.
No I am at the exact same point here I started making me thinking of the process of resolving this issue. I could just have made it worse and I am at the limit of my understanding of the circuitry. I barely know the basic principle of this type of amp. What I see as an H-bridge class D amp. But I am not sure. If so, there is a control circuitry that may have been affected by those over-currents.
I am not sure very sure what to do next and I hope someone could suggest some components to test or an other methodology to apply. I read about light-bulb limiter. I don't have the right components at this time.
What I will do next unless someone tell me not to is to test power supply on the remaining components. But I am not sure what to expect. And what risk for other components if I turn it on without the transistors. I doubt there is any but at this point i prefer keep thinking about it and look for help. I could also track the signal path by an oscilloscope if that could also be a good solution.
I am also aware of detailed functional documentation about this type of amp. What I have found was not very revealing to me.
Thank you for reading hope it was not too much of a pain!
I replaced R2, R3, R6, R20, R33, R34 and TR1, TR4,TR6, TR7, TR13, TR19, TR21, TR22
Schematic:
https://music-electronics-forum.com/...0&d=1394892610
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