Today I finished my Bosoz.
I connected my preamp to a small midi system with an input to see if everythink was ok. I gave the preamp some music and I heard music from the midi system. Without a music signal I could not hear any buzz or other noise.
I then connected my Bosoz to my AKSA 55W power amp. I immediatly hear a strong buzz and I smelt something wrong in my power amp. I closed everything down and played the power amp direclty from my cd player. Everythin was ok. The only problem I noticed is that now I can hear a power on and power off screech noise from the power amp for some milliseconds. Previously it was silent.
So the question is: Why is my Bosoz not cooperating with my AKSA preamp?
What may be the problem?
How can I measure my preamps output DC voltage with a DVM?
What may have been damaged in my power amp?
I have measured my Bosoz based on the original article and I got all the measurements correct.
Thanks
George
I connected my preamp to a small midi system with an input to see if everythink was ok. I gave the preamp some music and I heard music from the midi system. Without a music signal I could not hear any buzz or other noise.
I then connected my Bosoz to my AKSA 55W power amp. I immediatly hear a strong buzz and I smelt something wrong in my power amp. I closed everything down and played the power amp direclty from my cd player. Everythin was ok. The only problem I noticed is that now I can hear a power on and power off screech noise from the power amp for some milliseconds. Previously it was silent.
So the question is: Why is my Bosoz not cooperating with my AKSA preamp?
What may be the problem?
How can I measure my preamps output DC voltage with a DVM?
What may have been damaged in my power amp?
I have measured my Bosoz based on the original article and I got all the measurements correct.
Thanks
George
Most likely culprit is the output of the amplifier bleeding back
to the input of the preamp, and forming a feedback loop that
oscillates, usually up around 100 KHz. This would tend to make
the resistor in the amp's output RC network toast up a bit, but
is probably OK. Look for an ungrounded cable connection or
shield. If you don't use shielded interconnects, consider them.
to the input of the preamp, and forming a feedback loop that
oscillates, usually up around 100 KHz. This would tend to make
the resistor in the amp's output RC network toast up a bit, but
is probably OK. Look for an ungrounded cable connection or
shield. If you don't use shielded interconnects, consider them.
- Status
- This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.