Hi there,
I'm an indpendent tech and had this ARP Solina come in with a tough issue. Before I start pulling my hair out I thought I'd hit up this board to see if any other techs out there have dealt with this before.
There is a popping noise on the output whenever the modulation is engaged. It is quiet, but well above the noise floor of the unit. To be precise, it is about 40mV peak to peak. The noise floor is about 10mV with modulation on, 5mV without. I attached a picture of the scope of the output, set to 100mV scale, 20ms/div sweep. What you see there is one of the pops captured. Also atttached the schematic.
The modulation works by using 3 LFO signals, 120 degrees apart in phase, to modulate the clock of its 3 BBD delay sections fed by the same audio signal, and combining the outputs. The LFO signals themselves consist of a 1hz sine wave (the tremolo oscillator) superimposed on a 20hz sine wave. The popping noise is cyclic and it follows the tremolo oscillator, making 5 to 7 pops per second, or per oscillation. These circuits, referred to as the Control Circuit and Modulator Circuit, are on page 10 of the schematic.
Troubleshooting so far, I have tried disconnecting the audio out of each of the 3 modulator boards to inspect the output of each. It appears that each of their outputs is carrying the noise. When scoped or connected to the output independently, each modulator board produces 2 or 3 pops per second. I then tried disconnecting the LFO signal from the modulators. This eliminated the noise (and the modulation) and again, with the LFO connected to either one of the boards a component of the noise returned. This leads me to believe that the issue is in the tremolo oscillator or associated low pass filter, rather than the BBD circuits.
The LFO's are generated by square wave oscillators smoothed by RC networks, so I imagine some transient components are leaking through at the rise and fall of the square wave, pushing their way through the low pass filter and the BBD output, through to the audio.
As for solutions, nothing jumps out at me as an obvious suspect. I thought of replacing the electrolytics on the control board (cheap) and replacing all the 741 opamps with lower noise chips with identical pinout. Anything that may lower the noise floor I would not consider a waste of time, and I'm considering replacing a lot of these 741s. This customer is a professional who makes world renowned records, and he likes his signal to noise ratios.
I'm also thinking to check all the values of resistors and caps in the smoothing network on the LFO's, and if everything tests good maybe messing with the values a little.
I'm hoping someone else might have one of these boards or experience working on one, and can tell me at least that tThanhis issue is not inherent in the design and is actually a problem, and maybe some advice of where to look. In the meantime, at least I can say I did not underquote the project!
Thanks in advance for any insight or assistance.
I'm an indpendent tech and had this ARP Solina come in with a tough issue. Before I start pulling my hair out I thought I'd hit up this board to see if any other techs out there have dealt with this before.
There is a popping noise on the output whenever the modulation is engaged. It is quiet, but well above the noise floor of the unit. To be precise, it is about 40mV peak to peak. The noise floor is about 10mV with modulation on, 5mV without. I attached a picture of the scope of the output, set to 100mV scale, 20ms/div sweep. What you see there is one of the pops captured. Also atttached the schematic.
The modulation works by using 3 LFO signals, 120 degrees apart in phase, to modulate the clock of its 3 BBD delay sections fed by the same audio signal, and combining the outputs. The LFO signals themselves consist of a 1hz sine wave (the tremolo oscillator) superimposed on a 20hz sine wave. The popping noise is cyclic and it follows the tremolo oscillator, making 5 to 7 pops per second, or per oscillation. These circuits, referred to as the Control Circuit and Modulator Circuit, are on page 10 of the schematic.
Troubleshooting so far, I have tried disconnecting the audio out of each of the 3 modulator boards to inspect the output of each. It appears that each of their outputs is carrying the noise. When scoped or connected to the output independently, each modulator board produces 2 or 3 pops per second. I then tried disconnecting the LFO signal from the modulators. This eliminated the noise (and the modulation) and again, with the LFO connected to either one of the boards a component of the noise returned. This leads me to believe that the issue is in the tremolo oscillator or associated low pass filter, rather than the BBD circuits.
The LFO's are generated by square wave oscillators smoothed by RC networks, so I imagine some transient components are leaking through at the rise and fall of the square wave, pushing their way through the low pass filter and the BBD output, through to the audio.
As for solutions, nothing jumps out at me as an obvious suspect. I thought of replacing the electrolytics on the control board (cheap) and replacing all the 741 opamps with lower noise chips with identical pinout. Anything that may lower the noise floor I would not consider a waste of time, and I'm considering replacing a lot of these 741s. This customer is a professional who makes world renowned records, and he likes his signal to noise ratios.
I'm also thinking to check all the values of resistors and caps in the smoothing network on the LFO's, and if everything tests good maybe messing with the values a little.
I'm hoping someone else might have one of these boards or experience working on one, and can tell me at least that tThanhis issue is not inherent in the design and is actually a problem, and maybe some advice of where to look. In the meantime, at least I can say I did not underquote the project!
Thanks in advance for any insight or assistance.
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