Repaired a friends bass amp that had some bad output transistors. Put it back together and seemed to work OK, little low on power and drawing more line current than I would expect for a SMPS unit, about .8 amps at idle. Hooked up the scope and saw oscillation of 80mV p-p. and peaks every 4uS or so. Not sure what frequency that works out to.. Don't know where the oscillation is coming from or how to suppress it. Any suggestions?
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Markbass combo ii oscillation
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Markbass combo ii oscillation
Repaired a friends bass amp that had some bad output transistors. Put it back together and seemed to work OK, little low on power and drawing more line current than I would expect for a SMPS unit, about .8 amps at idle. Hooked up the scope and saw oscillation of 80mV p-p. and peaks every 4uS or so. Not sure what frequency that works out to.. Don't know where the oscillation is coming from or how to suppress it. Any suggestions?Tags: None
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My thoughts were that x-pro was referring to the 250Khz on the output being filtered out. Which would be done in a more expensive unit, but is probably not the source of this fault.
In other words, the 'fix' should be found elsewhere than filtering out HF noise that is not audible (and only 80mV so not stealing power).Originally posted by EnzoI have a sign in my shop that says, "Never think up reasons not to check something."
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Originally posted by g1 View PostMy thoughts were that x-pro was referring to the 250Khz on the output being filtered out. Which would be done in a more expensive unit, but is probably not the source of this fault.
In other words, the 'fix' should be found elsewhere than filtering out HF noise that is not audible (and only 80mV so not stealing power).
When you need to translate, wrong spelling can be a severe barrier.Last edited by Helmholtz; 01-24-2023, 12:59 AM.- Own Opinions Only -
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Originally posted by g1 View PostMy thoughts were that x-pro was referring to the 250Khz on the output being filtered out. Which would be done in a more expensive unit, but is probably not the source of this fault.
In other words, the 'fix' should be found elsewhere than filtering out HF noise that is not audible (and only 80mV so not stealing power).
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I THINK what x-pro means (speculating a bit) is that this unit doesn't have a well filtered supply or output section and that you might expect some slight power supply noise at the speaker out, and that it isn't a big deal because it's well out of the audio range anyway. Again, that is a bit of speculation from me.
That said, did you bias the amp after you replaced outputs? Your high idle current could be from an overbiased amp. I don't think it's the power supply causing your problem. The schematic doesn't give any amp current specs or bias current specs (that I could find), so we don't even know for sure if it's idling high, although that does seem a bit high to me. I found some bias info here:
https://www.diyaudio.com/community/t...repair.352890/
It's for a different amp, but from the description in post #2, it seems to be the same output section, so I'd check your bias current and see how it stacks up against those numbers."I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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