So I'm fairly new to electronics repair all together. I own a machine shop and had quite a few power supplies in my CNC machines go out that cost an arm and a leg to replace, so I figured I would start watching "Learn Electronics" videos and figure out how to repair them to save some money... Now here I am, full on immersed in the electronics hobby and trying to fix amps for some friends of mine. I am very open to constructive criticism and love to learn, so if there's something obviously ignorant that I'm doing, feel free to call me out!
On to my question. I am on my 4th Crate amp repair for a friend of mine, and all of the repairs have been replacing components that kept the amp from switching channels, replacing some of the 5 watt resistors because the legs broke, etc... But once the amp is operational, I have noticed that every one of them that I have fixed has some weird stuff going on at the test points. The schematics give a detailed set of conditions for the test signal input and a detailed list of readings that you should be getting at the test points. But when I set everything up, some of the test points will be correct and some of them will be off by half value or more, but the amp still plays and sounds good. Should I be chasing components around the Op-Amps to try and get the test point values reading correctly? Is this just something that happens with amps? Is my setup somehow incorrect, causing faulty readings?
I'm also confused by some of the values being incorrect, but the next value down the line being correct. For example, on the amp that I'm currently working on, in condition C (clean channel) TP1 reads very low, but TP2 is very close to what its supposed to be. TP1 feeds the input of the op-amp that TP2 is on... so how can TP2 be correct if its incoming signal is low?
The amp is plugged into an Isolation Transformer. Speaker jack is hooked to a 4 ohm resistor. I have a signal generator feeding the required signal from the "Test Point Conditions" listed on the schematic into the Input Jack. I have my oscilloscope lead grounded to chassis ground and I am probing the Test Points on the legs of the Op-Amp IC on the board. +/-16 V for Pins 4 and 8 of op-amps checks good. Here's a list of the test point measurements that I took. Compare to attached schematic. All waveforms looked correct, values were just off.
CONDITION A - Voltage at speaker jack during test was 15 Vrms
TP1 = 200 mVpp
TP2 = 1.8 Vpp
TP3 = 6.24 Vpp
TP4 = 4.88 Vpp
TP5 = 10.8 Vpp
TP6 = FLAT LINE
TP7 = 3.3 Vpp
TP8 = 1.62 Vpp
CONDITION B - Voltage at speaker jack during test was 20 Vrms
TP1 = 220 mVpp
TP2 = 5.9 Vpp
TP3 = 7.4 Vpp
TP4 = 5.08 Vpp
TP5 = 13.8 Vpp
TP6 = FLAT LINE
TP7 = 7.6 Vpp
TP8 = 3.76 Vpp
CONDITION C - Voltage at speaker jack during test was 8.6 Vrms
TP1 = 520 mVpp
TP2 = 5.12 Vpp
TP3 = 216 mVpp
TP4 = FLAT LINE
TP5 = FLAT LINE
TP6 = 2.4 Vpp
TP7 = 2.06 Vpp
TP8 = 1.0 Vpp
POWER AMP
TP9 = 1.0 Vac / 0 Vdc
TP10 = .65 Vac / .6 Vdc
TP11 = 28.8 Vac / 1.25 Vdc
TP12 = 28.8 Vac / -.588 Vdc
TP13 = 26.6 Vac / .028 Vdc
TP14 = 1.68 Vpp ripple / 32.7 Vdc
TP15 = 1.68 Vpp ripple / -32.7 Vdc
TP16 = .8 Vpp ripple / 10.06 Vdc
If you were working on this amp, would these readings lead you to dig farther into it, or would you send it out as complete since it plays, operates and sounds good? This is just a hobby for me, and my friend isn't relying on these amps for live shows and stuff, but I still don't want to be sending out junk because I don't know what to do with test point readings.
On to my question. I am on my 4th Crate amp repair for a friend of mine, and all of the repairs have been replacing components that kept the amp from switching channels, replacing some of the 5 watt resistors because the legs broke, etc... But once the amp is operational, I have noticed that every one of them that I have fixed has some weird stuff going on at the test points. The schematics give a detailed set of conditions for the test signal input and a detailed list of readings that you should be getting at the test points. But when I set everything up, some of the test points will be correct and some of them will be off by half value or more, but the amp still plays and sounds good. Should I be chasing components around the Op-Amps to try and get the test point values reading correctly? Is this just something that happens with amps? Is my setup somehow incorrect, causing faulty readings?
I'm also confused by some of the values being incorrect, but the next value down the line being correct. For example, on the amp that I'm currently working on, in condition C (clean channel) TP1 reads very low, but TP2 is very close to what its supposed to be. TP1 feeds the input of the op-amp that TP2 is on... so how can TP2 be correct if its incoming signal is low?
The amp is plugged into an Isolation Transformer. Speaker jack is hooked to a 4 ohm resistor. I have a signal generator feeding the required signal from the "Test Point Conditions" listed on the schematic into the Input Jack. I have my oscilloscope lead grounded to chassis ground and I am probing the Test Points on the legs of the Op-Amp IC on the board. +/-16 V for Pins 4 and 8 of op-amps checks good. Here's a list of the test point measurements that I took. Compare to attached schematic. All waveforms looked correct, values were just off.
CONDITION A - Voltage at speaker jack during test was 15 Vrms
TP1 = 200 mVpp
TP2 = 1.8 Vpp
TP3 = 6.24 Vpp
TP4 = 4.88 Vpp
TP5 = 10.8 Vpp
TP6 = FLAT LINE
TP7 = 3.3 Vpp
TP8 = 1.62 Vpp
CONDITION B - Voltage at speaker jack during test was 20 Vrms
TP1 = 220 mVpp
TP2 = 5.9 Vpp
TP3 = 7.4 Vpp
TP4 = 5.08 Vpp
TP5 = 13.8 Vpp
TP6 = FLAT LINE
TP7 = 7.6 Vpp
TP8 = 3.76 Vpp
CONDITION C - Voltage at speaker jack during test was 8.6 Vrms
TP1 = 520 mVpp
TP2 = 5.12 Vpp
TP3 = 216 mVpp
TP4 = FLAT LINE
TP5 = FLAT LINE
TP6 = 2.4 Vpp
TP7 = 2.06 Vpp
TP8 = 1.0 Vpp
POWER AMP
TP9 = 1.0 Vac / 0 Vdc
TP10 = .65 Vac / .6 Vdc
TP11 = 28.8 Vac / 1.25 Vdc
TP12 = 28.8 Vac / -.588 Vdc
TP13 = 26.6 Vac / .028 Vdc
TP14 = 1.68 Vpp ripple / 32.7 Vdc
TP15 = 1.68 Vpp ripple / -32.7 Vdc
TP16 = .8 Vpp ripple / 10.06 Vdc
If you were working on this amp, would these readings lead you to dig farther into it, or would you send it out as complete since it plays, operates and sounds good? This is just a hobby for me, and my friend isn't relying on these amps for live shows and stuff, but I still don't want to be sending out junk because I don't know what to do with test point readings.
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