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Swordfishy/ASPEN FETZILLA power amp

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now measuring with my BK precision dmm set too 200mv scale , amp on .1mv ac . pre amp turned on same . cd player turned on - same . speakers were still connected if that matters .

If the room where you measure is very quiet it does not matter.

If the room is not quiet the speakers will act like microphones and send a signal down the leads to the amps o/p.

The amp's feedback will attempt to null the o/p if the i/p is silent but this will not be sufficient to prevent a reading on your DMM.

So it may be your amp is even more quiet than you measured.

Normally to test an amp's noise you would short the i/p and disconnect the speakers.
 
Normally to test an amp's noise you would short the i/p and disconnect the speakers.

Thanks Mike, I'll measure again tonight with these conditions.

@Andrew:

Dead quiet was what I heard, not what I measured. Maybe there's a signal at a frequency I can't hear? I hope not, but it's possible.
Please also bear in mind that the amp and case are mostly disassembled, with 2 transformers piled one on the other and generic bridges rather than discrete diodes, as I need to make changes for the various tests.

BTW, I'm interested to know the threshold level of noise for you to hear anything from your speakers? I know it's dependent upon sensitivity/impedance, but a ball park figure would be nice.

@Hugh:
Testing resumes tonight, so I hope to have some more info then.

Cheers,
Ron.
 
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Here are noise measurements from my Fetzilla amp. I have used Agilent U3401A bench multimeter on 500mVac scale with 10uV resolution. The amp and multimeter was powered up for 30 minutes before measurement. Measurement was done with input cables connected to DAC's output but DAC was not powered up. I have measured at the end of speaker wire with speakers connected and disconnected. There was no difference in measurements in both cases. Since you have read this far then probably you are curious about results. Here you are, the measurement was: 000.00 mVac. Is that good in your book Andrew T?

George
 
Hugh,

As you remember I have designed different power supply for my Fetzilla amp. It is old fashion design with two transformers, 4 plain vanilla 35A bridges and some good filtering caps in pi filter configuration (I have posted this schematic here). I think that the key to have quiet amp is actual execution of design and planing ahead. As you have said before good grounding is black magic. Partly it is because you will have to figure out the best way to do it during the building process and think about external components that will be connected to the amp too. Even when you manage to get it right and your amp alone is dead quiet you can screw things up when you connect to it equipment that has grounding problems.

George
 
Andrew

I could not believe myself during my first measurement, so I left multimeter connected to the amp for 3 hours and was checking results quite often. All the time the reading was the same and DC offset during this period was changing between 3mVdc and 4mVdc. This multimeter can measure frequency up to 500KHz when set to AC voltage.

George
 
My bench DMM has a 50000 count that auto ranges down to 499.99mVac.

If the reading is >=100.01mVac it displays correctly
If the reading is <=99.99mVac the display instantly changes to 0.00mVac. I can see it is wrong.

My hand helds do not do this. They are not as accurate, nor are they as sensitive, being only 2000 count down to 199.9mVac, but I can see they agree with each other and from experience I know the display is in the correct ballpark.
 
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If you are chasing low AC hum signals on a DVM the old trick of a simple amp to boost these tiny levels to something more measurable is worth trying. I think the output would need to be AC coupled too to be universally suitable for all DVM's

This is from Radford.

(Andrew might need a few of these cascaded for that DVM mentioned)
 

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Do you mean power lines ? The rails ?

If so you can use either.

Common mode chokes in the + & - rails effectively clean up the earth - to some extent - and because the fluxes cancel they can be small & quite cheap.

Differential chokes need much bigger cores to deal with the magnetic fluxes that are cumulative and can tent to saturate the core if there is no magnetic gap. So they tend to be big, heavy and expensive - but if used in all legs they clean the power rails very effectively.

Not sure about the symbols. I watch out for the dots at one end of the coil symbol to indicate polarity.
 
I saw, I asked, I got the answer.

Any other answers?

Why do I ask again?

To me common mode choke requires two separate coils that have 4 pins to connect to the outside world.
I thought that differential mode chokes had one coil that requires 2 pins to connect to the outside world.

What am I misunderstanding about the difference between common and differential modes?
 
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