Originally posted by The Dude
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Trace Elliot AH1000-12 schematic needed
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Here's a thread detailing my experience.
http://music-electronics-forum.com/t45099/
Post #30 links the module I bought. There are different ones. You'll need to pay attention to mono/stereo, power output, power supply requirements, etc. Ebay is full of them. I have no doubt you can find one that would work."I took a photo of my ohm meter... It didn't help." Enzo 8/20/22
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Originally posted by Roberto View PostIt's not a matter of being loud, but to restore the original features of the amp.
For my personal use
and to sell it in the future.
Just being the Devil´s advocate, nothing personal.
You might also spend the $90 on the replacement power block, ... anything further is burning money with a match.Juan Manuel Fahey
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Originally posted by Roberto View PostLike those? www.ebay.it/itm/192155407840
Are they reliable for this purpose (adding a bridge rectifier with enough filtering) running two modules as stereo or together bridged?
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Originally posted by glebert View PostI haven't even gotten around to installing any of the modules I've bought (though I have amps that need them), but personally I would go with the biamp/stereo configuration and not try to bridge them. Who needs 1000W into one cabinet?
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Originally posted by J M Fahey View PostJust being the Devil´s advocate, nothing personal.
You might also spend the $90 on the replacement power block, ... anything further is burning money with a match.
The Dude has proposed some cheaper solutions (around one third of it for 2 modules), using the big toroid already installed (plus a separate rectifier and capacitors board).
EDIT: In Italy those amps are sold, used, at around 800-900 €.
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Originally posted by Roberto View PostNo one, but this is the way this amp came out of the factory, I would like to keep it. In case of resell, if it's a matter of spending 30 euros for these ebay cheap modules that The Dude testes, it could be a a plus.
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Originally posted by glebert View PostIf you plan on reselling one thing you'd better do is actually test it at full power with minimum load, which is not easy to do with a 1000 watt amp.
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Originally posted by Roberto View PostThanks for the tip glebert. Anyone uses electrical heaters to do such kind of tests? Something like three 2kW heaters in parallel (on this side of the pond we run at 230VAC) that should make something around 8 Ohm load (how hot the heaters run usually? in other words, will the resistance be much lower when run cold/warm?).
Oh, and while resistive load testing is good, some high power testing through a cab is important too. My cursed SVT 7 Pro's current problem only happens during vibration/shock (like what happens when sitting on a bass cab with 1000 watts coming out), and does not show up during a resistive test.Last edited by glebert; 05-03-2018, 07:02 PM.
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Originally posted by glebert View PostOh, and while resistive load testing is good, some high power testing through a cab is important too. My cursed SVT 7 Pro's current problem only happens during vibration/shock (like what happens when sitting on a bass cab with 1000 watts coming out), and does not show up during a resistive test.
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Originally posted by Roberto View PostThank for this detail! May I know what was the issue, at the end? One of the broken amps that I've bought had similar issues and it was just a cold welding that broke down with the years. Half an hour and few cents to bring it back to life.
Haven't gotten around to working on it yet, and I will admit it is mostly reluctance to even touch an iron to surface mount components, which is dumb.
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Electrical water heaters are the best load resistor available over the counter.
Run them under water, of course.
Resistance variation is actually quite small, since you are not letting them run red or white hot, as in a lamp or an oven/toaster/etc. situation; boiling water is actuall real close to ambient temperature, compared to those other duties.
10 ohms is actually real close to 8 ohms, if we are testing amp overheating, "burn in", etc. it´s close enough.
And in fact 8 ohm real world speakers are above 10 ohms over most of their range, except at a midrange section between 200 and 350 or 400 Hz, just look at this graph:
8 ohm red line; 10 ohm blue line:
Juan Manuel Fahey
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Thanks again glebert and Juan Manuel.
So the easiest option is to put two water heating of 3 kW each in parallel, immersed in water and connected to a speakon connector.
Considering 1 kW ouput power, and a reasonable 2 hours of continuous full power test, at least 25 liters of water are needed to avoid going into ebullition:
1 kW are 860 kCal/h
860 kCal/h / 25 liters = 34.4 K/h
So we won’t go into ebullition even if the starting water temperature is 30 Celsius degrees, and considering no thermal dispersion into the ambient.
Noting against ebullition, except it can sprout water on the test bench and vapour in the air that can condensate on colder surfaces.
Do you use something similar Juan?Last edited by Roberto; 05-05-2018, 12:46 PM.
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