Hello, I was given this 100W bass amp "cube" from a fella whom repeatedly "blew" the 2SC2837, TO-3P output transistors. After the third time servicing it, the shop told him "sorry, replacements are no longer available..."
In any case, he is moving so gave it to me. I've located some similar domestic replacement output transistors, however the issue is, if I'm gonna repair this thing, I'd like to eliminate the possibility of it happening again.
Here is the schematic of the original power amp board. The assembly itself looks similar to this. (I have the new version with the integrated soft-start.) Notice that "driver" Q5 is middle-left black, and Q4 is middle-right black and they are both not heat-sinked. On my board, the three transistors on the heatsink, Q1-3, have melted solder joints I assume from overheating (before the fuse blew.) The board is still in good shape and can be reused.
Now my question is this: rather than repair it and risk another "meltdown" later, I'm wondering if I could parallel a second 2SC2837 with Q1 and Q3 and mount them underneath, and add heatsinks to Q4 and Q5? Or would that skew the biasing? I realize I'm not gonna get 200W out of this thing, just want to avoid another repair later.
Or, is the issue purely heat? Meaning, if I machined vent holes in the metal mounting plate and installed an air circulation fan to cool things off, would it probably never fail again? The design is pretty poor... solid aluminum plate, to which a horizontally-oriented heatsink is mounted. (Against convection flow.) On the exterior, it's just a solid, smooth plate. Here is a photo of the newer assembly removed from the plate. "Up" is to the right when mounted. The complete exterior looks like this. One person did a thermal mod of this already: Modded my SWR LA-15...ro - TalkBass Forums
Thanks for your time.
In any case, he is moving so gave it to me. I've located some similar domestic replacement output transistors, however the issue is, if I'm gonna repair this thing, I'd like to eliminate the possibility of it happening again.
Here is the schematic of the original power amp board. The assembly itself looks similar to this. (I have the new version with the integrated soft-start.) Notice that "driver" Q5 is middle-left black, and Q4 is middle-right black and they are both not heat-sinked. On my board, the three transistors on the heatsink, Q1-3, have melted solder joints I assume from overheating (before the fuse blew.) The board is still in good shape and can be reused.
Now my question is this: rather than repair it and risk another "meltdown" later, I'm wondering if I could parallel a second 2SC2837 with Q1 and Q3 and mount them underneath, and add heatsinks to Q4 and Q5? Or would that skew the biasing? I realize I'm not gonna get 200W out of this thing, just want to avoid another repair later.
Or, is the issue purely heat? Meaning, if I machined vent holes in the metal mounting plate and installed an air circulation fan to cool things off, would it probably never fail again? The design is pretty poor... solid aluminum plate, to which a horizontally-oriented heatsink is mounted. (Against convection flow.) On the exterior, it's just a solid, smooth plate. Here is a photo of the newer assembly removed from the plate. "Up" is to the right when mounted. The complete exterior looks like this. One person did a thermal mod of this already: Modded my SWR LA-15...ro - TalkBass Forums
Thanks for your time.
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