Hey guys, i am a complete noob, and have just signed up to the forum since it seemed like there are some knowledgeable people here.
I have a KX1200 that i am trying to fix for a friend - it turned on but had a constant tone, even when turned down at volume.
I took the amp out, and after removing the heatsink i found that one of the LM3886t's was all melted. I removed this from the board, and after reading that the two LM's work in parallel, i turned the amp on to see if it would work. It did, and i was able to play through it fine for about ten minutes. Worked just as an amp should.
I gave it back to my friend to see if it holds up, but have told him to keeep it at lower volume levels for the moment.
I have ordered another LM and will attempt to fit it in the spare spot and see how it goes.
My questions were though: Is it ok to be running the amp at all with only one LM circuit in operation?
And also: when i looked at the LM's they still had a piece of plastic between them and the heatsink. I thought this might have been a factory fault and removed the plastic so that the metal of the LM could touch the metal of the heatsink (with some thermal paste applied also). Am i right in thinking that could be a factory fault or is the plastic strip supposed to be between heatsink and back of LM?
Thanks guys.
Stuart, Australia.
I have a KX1200 that i am trying to fix for a friend - it turned on but had a constant tone, even when turned down at volume.
I took the amp out, and after removing the heatsink i found that one of the LM3886t's was all melted. I removed this from the board, and after reading that the two LM's work in parallel, i turned the amp on to see if it would work. It did, and i was able to play through it fine for about ten minutes. Worked just as an amp should.
I gave it back to my friend to see if it holds up, but have told him to keeep it at lower volume levels for the moment.
I have ordered another LM and will attempt to fit it in the spare spot and see how it goes.
My questions were though: Is it ok to be running the amp at all with only one LM circuit in operation?
And also: when i looked at the LM's they still had a piece of plastic between them and the heatsink. I thought this might have been a factory fault and removed the plastic so that the metal of the LM could touch the metal of the heatsink (with some thermal paste applied also). Am i right in thinking that could be a factory fault or is the plastic strip supposed to be between heatsink and back of LM?
Thanks guys.
Stuart, Australia.
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