Well, I spent some "quality time" with the beast over the weekend. The schematics Yorkville provided were for a newer version of a newer head and the layout and design of THIS combo model (and a year or two older) didn't exactly match but seemed to be about 85% similar.
I did find a partially functioning 7915 regulator which I replaced but the problem didn't go away. After isolating sections of the amp I determined that the explosive DC pop was coming out of the DIGITAL board. If you plugged a 1/4" plug into the channel return loop jack (which disconnects the front end and digital board) the rest of the amp was normal. I had previously ruled out the input stage so the only thing left was the digital board... the last place I looked!
I figure the owner has 4 realistic options:
1. Dump the programming and return the amp to factory stock in the hopes that this problem is a memory corruption and reprogramming will get rid of it.
2. Pay big $$ to get a replacement digital board (I have to contact Yorkville about that one to find out how much $$).
3. Look for a basket-case chassis that has a good digital board.
4. Use the amp but ALWAYS turn down the Master volume control to "0" before turning the amp off (the amps seems to otherwise work fine)!
I did not want to list "modification" of the amp for a Turn-Off circuit to add to the MUTE circuitry, but one design difference I found was in the mute circuit. The one in this amp is a turn-on mute (which isn't totally silent) and is pretty basic (3 components besides the actually mute FETs) while the one in the schematic has about 8-10 components including a transistor switch and Zener diode circuit!
Steve
I did find a partially functioning 7915 regulator which I replaced but the problem didn't go away. After isolating sections of the amp I determined that the explosive DC pop was coming out of the DIGITAL board. If you plugged a 1/4" plug into the channel return loop jack (which disconnects the front end and digital board) the rest of the amp was normal. I had previously ruled out the input stage so the only thing left was the digital board... the last place I looked!
I figure the owner has 4 realistic options:
1. Dump the programming and return the amp to factory stock in the hopes that this problem is a memory corruption and reprogramming will get rid of it.
2. Pay big $$ to get a replacement digital board (I have to contact Yorkville about that one to find out how much $$).
3. Look for a basket-case chassis that has a good digital board.
4. Use the amp but ALWAYS turn down the Master volume control to "0" before turning the amp off (the amps seems to otherwise work fine)!
I did not want to list "modification" of the amp for a Turn-Off circuit to add to the MUTE circuitry, but one design difference I found was in the mute circuit. The one in this amp is a turn-on mute (which isn't totally silent) and is pretty basic (3 components besides the actually mute FETs) while the one in the schematic has about 8-10 components including a transistor switch and Zener diode circuit!
Steve
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