A little background on my situation. I used a pair of ART312A's at a Civil War Reenactment this last weekend. The speakers were used in a symposium tent to amplify a single mic for guest speakers. Saturday's event went without incident. That evening I covered the speakers with plastic trash bags to keep the mildew off even though sound system was in very large tent.
The next morning I powered up the system. One speaker came up. The other never came out of protect mode (red led). Recycling power did no good. I noticed a slight odor coming from the rear of the enclosure so I pulled it from service.
I brought it home and decided to dig into it. This is the first time inside. I did study an older thread on this forum http://music-electronics-forum.com/t28333/ so I had a little head start as to what I should look for. I removed the amp module and disconnected the speaker wires. I started sniffing around the module and looking for something burned to no avail. I stuck my nose into the enclosure and the odor was strong. I suspected the voice coil was fried and I was right. Open coil.
I saw one fuse blown on the main board. I replaced the 4 amp fuse and powered the module up. Protect LED went out normally. I hooked up another woofer and powered up. Sounded perfectly normal. However there was a distinctive faint popping sound out of the driver. First it sounded like a regular pattern of a ticking sound. Then it started sounding intermittent. Popping and frying but very low level. I haven't put a scope on the output yet to see if it was symmetrical or asymmetrical. This could tell me if the problem was coming from a previous stage (AC) or if it was coming from one of the driver transistors before the main output transistors. Note: tweeter circuit is quiet and works fine.
The popping could be coming from a leaking capacitor, bad solid state device or even some contamination of flux under a surface mount device. Something that wasn't properly cleaned in the board level assembly. I have seen this before in troubleshooting noise like this.
I downloaded and studied the Bass-Amp schematic and noticed something interesting in the protect circuit. All the protect circuit does, which is U12A and B, is upon powerup, mute the audio until the speaker output line stabilizes and once at zero, unmutes. This is not a protect circuit. It just mutes audio until output is zero or if at any time the output swerves from zero DC. A failure of the complimentary output stage will not protect the driver upon powerup or anytime during use by the protect circuit.
At least this is my understanding. Nothing will protect the driver should there be a failure of the output circuit except the fuses. In this case something failed and the output circuit went full negative, blew the voice coil and then blew the fuse.
All of my professional power amps have relays in the speaker line to disconnect the speaker from the output stage should a DC offset appear on the output.
Now for my questions: What protects the driver from a failure of the output stage? Why is it important to mute the audio only when powering up besides a little distortion? Anyone else have a similar experience?
I'll be digging into the circuit with a scope this week to see if I can find the culprit.
Rick
The next morning I powered up the system. One speaker came up. The other never came out of protect mode (red led). Recycling power did no good. I noticed a slight odor coming from the rear of the enclosure so I pulled it from service.
I brought it home and decided to dig into it. This is the first time inside. I did study an older thread on this forum http://music-electronics-forum.com/t28333/ so I had a little head start as to what I should look for. I removed the amp module and disconnected the speaker wires. I started sniffing around the module and looking for something burned to no avail. I stuck my nose into the enclosure and the odor was strong. I suspected the voice coil was fried and I was right. Open coil.
I saw one fuse blown on the main board. I replaced the 4 amp fuse and powered the module up. Protect LED went out normally. I hooked up another woofer and powered up. Sounded perfectly normal. However there was a distinctive faint popping sound out of the driver. First it sounded like a regular pattern of a ticking sound. Then it started sounding intermittent. Popping and frying but very low level. I haven't put a scope on the output yet to see if it was symmetrical or asymmetrical. This could tell me if the problem was coming from a previous stage (AC) or if it was coming from one of the driver transistors before the main output transistors. Note: tweeter circuit is quiet and works fine.
The popping could be coming from a leaking capacitor, bad solid state device or even some contamination of flux under a surface mount device. Something that wasn't properly cleaned in the board level assembly. I have seen this before in troubleshooting noise like this.
I downloaded and studied the Bass-Amp schematic and noticed something interesting in the protect circuit. All the protect circuit does, which is U12A and B, is upon powerup, mute the audio until the speaker output line stabilizes and once at zero, unmutes. This is not a protect circuit. It just mutes audio until output is zero or if at any time the output swerves from zero DC. A failure of the complimentary output stage will not protect the driver upon powerup or anytime during use by the protect circuit.
At least this is my understanding. Nothing will protect the driver should there be a failure of the output circuit except the fuses. In this case something failed and the output circuit went full negative, blew the voice coil and then blew the fuse.
All of my professional power amps have relays in the speaker line to disconnect the speaker from the output stage should a DC offset appear on the output.
Now for my questions: What protects the driver from a failure of the output stage? Why is it important to mute the audio only when powering up besides a little distortion? Anyone else have a similar experience?
I'll be digging into the circuit with a scope this week to see if I can find the culprit.
Rick
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