Newbie seeking advice here - solute to the experts.
I recently got into vintage amps and my first one was a 1972 Panasonic RE-7412, a little Am/FM receiver/amp - just love its mid-century look!
The amp worked well in general, with some hum and static noises. To address those issues, I started recap the baby. It went well in the beginning with noticable improvement of sound quality with the fist few new caps that I put in, but unfortunately turned south at some point after more caps were replaced - the sound of the left channel became completely distorted and weak.
I tried to troubleshoot by viewing output of 1000Hz sine wave passing through the amp with oscilloscope. The output that I measured directly from the Audio Power Amplifier IC's (NEC upc20c) pin shows distortion from the bad channel comparing to perfect sine wave from the good one. See images attached.
At this point, can I be certain its the IC that turned bad and should be replaced (I've purchased replacement chip)? Or could it be some other cause?
The schematic of the amp is also attached.
Thanks for your input in advance!
I recently got into vintage amps and my first one was a 1972 Panasonic RE-7412, a little Am/FM receiver/amp - just love its mid-century look!
The amp worked well in general, with some hum and static noises. To address those issues, I started recap the baby. It went well in the beginning with noticable improvement of sound quality with the fist few new caps that I put in, but unfortunately turned south at some point after more caps were replaced - the sound of the left channel became completely distorted and weak.
I tried to troubleshoot by viewing output of 1000Hz sine wave passing through the amp with oscilloscope. The output that I measured directly from the Audio Power Amplifier IC's (NEC upc20c) pin shows distortion from the bad channel comparing to perfect sine wave from the good one. See images attached.
At this point, can I be certain its the IC that turned bad and should be replaced (I've purchased replacement chip)? Or could it be some other cause?
The schematic of the amp is also attached.
Thanks for your input in advance!
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