Go Back   Home > Forums > Amplifiers > Chip Amps
Home Forums Rules Articles Store Gallery Blogs Register Donations FAQ Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read

Chip Amps Amplifiers based on integrated circuits

Please consider donating to help us continue to serve you.

Ads on/off / Custom Title / More PMs / More album space / Advanced printing & mass image saving
Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 29th December 2007, 04:29 PM   #1
john65b is offline john65b  United States
diyAudio Member
 
john65b's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Chicago
Default Chip Amp Oscillations!!!

Hey all,

I am stumped on this one - tried searching the forum and believe it or not, could not find anything...I have been scratching my head for months...

I built a point to point GC with the 9 components per the original. Originally had the input cap removed and works perfectly with my 12B4 preamp. But once I put my passive pre in front of the amp, Oscillates like crazy. Tried my Lightspeed pre and again oscillates like crazy. Tried my Foreplay, and another tubed pre and works great.

I put in the Input caps on the amp, and it still oscillates like nuts with the passive pre, LS, but not with the tubed preamps....

I do not have bypass caps on the 2200uF caps on rails at chip. I basically have it as shown on Mick's url:

http://dogbreath.de/Chipamps/GainCar...nCardCopy.html

Identical, but with 30V rails, and a Preamp where the front end Pot is. And I do have 6800uf caps/Rail on the supply end too.

I put a voltmeter across the dummy resistors while it was oscillating and read 20VAC (no DC on outputs that I could measure) before the 2A fuse blew.

Any advice???
__________________
"I speak Spanish to God, Italian to Women, French to Men, and German to my Horse" - Charles V
  Reply With Quote
Old 29th December 2007, 05:01 PM   #2
john65b is offline john65b  United States
diyAudio Member
 
john65b's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Chicago
One of the cool things that came out of this "problem" is I built an oscillation detector...

I am one of those poor slobs in this hobby without a scope (well I have one - bought it on ebay for $20 - 'nuf said)

Anyway on another thread, Unclejed613 suggested building a cheap and easy oscillation detector with a couple of components...

How to destroy your high-end audio equipment...


"you might want to try a "quick and dirty" oscillation detector using an LED. you want to take an LED, put a 100 ohm resistor in series with it, then put a 4.7nf cap in series with the 100 ohm resistor. the "unused" leg of the LED becomes ground (polarity of the LED doesn't matter). the open leg of the cap becomes the input. then put a 1k resistor from the junction of the cap and series resistor to ground. the circuit is connected across the speaker terminals. any oscillation above 1 volt and above 20khz should light the LED, especially if the oscillation is continuous.

LED's are such useful devices......"


Very Cool! Pic attached with my 25W 8.2 load resistors - I just attach to the amp outputs and led light during oscillations. I built it in 25 minutes and will plan on using it on all my amps to spare possible damage to speakers...

Anyway, the detector ights up like a Christmas tree with the passive pre or lightspeed preamp hooked up to the Gainclone...
Attached Images
File Type: jpg oscillation detector.jpg (68.7 KB, 280 views)
__________________
"I speak Spanish to God, Italian to Women, French to Men, and German to my Horse" - Charles V
  Reply With Quote
Old 29th December 2007, 05:10 PM   #3
kaos is offline kaos  United States
diyAudio Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Los Angeles
First thing I’d try is placing a resistor in series with Cin (about 1K), and a 220pF cap across Rg.
  Reply With Quote
Old 29th December 2007, 06:03 PM   #4
diyAudio Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Connecticut
Send a message via AIM to Stormrider Send a message via MSN to Stormrider
Does it oscillate with a load, such as a speaker or power resistor? Perhaps try adding a zobel?
__________________
AJ
  Reply With Quote
Old 29th December 2007, 06:10 PM   #5
john65b is offline john65b  United States
diyAudio Member
 
john65b's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Chicago
Only oscillated with passive preamp attached...

There is a zobel at end of the amp - see the url.

100nF and 2.7 ohm.

I actually added a 1K resistor in series with Cin (between Cin and amp input) - no more oscilations, but low volume on passive pre.
__________________
"I speak Spanish to God, Italian to Women, French to Men, and German to my Horse" - Charles V
  Reply With Quote
Old 29th December 2007, 06:20 PM   #6
Duo is offline Duo  Canada
diyAudio Member
 
Duo's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Victoria, BC, Canada
Send a message via ICQ to Duo
It sounds as if your amplifier oscillates when driven from a possibly low impedance source. Most generally, your amplifier chip should have some resistance in series with its input, note that many audio amps like this use something in the area of 1k, and also something between 10K and 100K to ground to bias the amplifier to zero volts DC offset.

I fixed a gainclone for a friend recently which had the input series resistors, but no grounding resistors, and would float around with DC offset notably just pulling right to one rail. This is bad for your speakers! haha.

EDIT: Bypass capacitors are also a good idea to keep things quiet and/or stable.
  Reply With Quote
Old 29th December 2007, 06:53 PM   #7
gootee is offline gootee  United States
diyAudio Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Indiana
Blog Entries: 1
You should probably have a small cap across the feedback resistor, Rf, too. But you could try lower values, first, and use the lowest value that works. I'd start with at least 15 pF, and increase it if you have to.

And you should _definitely_ have 0.1uF caps directly from (right at) each power pin to power ground.

After adding a resistance, as already suggested, in series with the + input, I would add a small capacitor to ground, from the + input pin, to act as a (high-frequency) lowpass RF filter. If you use a 1K resistor, there, then 330pF to ground would give a lowpass corner frequency of f=1/(2*Pi*R*C) = 482 kHz.

If you haven't already done so, you will probably want to download and study the datasheet, from http://www.national.com .

A photo of your layout might be helpful.
  Reply With Quote
Old 29th December 2007, 07:04 PM   #8
Duo is offline Duo  Canada
diyAudio Member
 
Duo's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2002
Location: Victoria, BC, Canada
Send a message via ICQ to Duo
Datasheets are good! Some application notes and data will talk about stability as well, and good ideas and methods of properly using the chip.
  Reply With Quote
Old 29th December 2007, 07:30 PM   #9
Electrons are yellow and more is better!
diyAudio Member
 
peranders's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Göteborg, Sweden
Blog Entries: 4
Default Re: Chip Amp Oscillations!!!

Quote:
Originally posted by john65b
I do not have bypass caps on the 2200uF caps on rails at chip. I basically have it as shown on Mick's url:
How much do you have in total? A good idea is the read the datasheet and the AN-1192.
__________________
/Per-Anders (my first name) or P-A as my friends call me
  Reply With Quote
Old 29th December 2007, 07:44 PM   #10
john65b is offline john65b  United States
diyAudio Member
 
john65b's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Chicago
I have 2200uF at the chips/rail and 6800uF at the PS.

I have removed the 4.7uF cap and just placed the 1k resistor in series on the inputs. All is well. No more oscillations. My passive pre is a 24 step attenuator that the highest volume setting is 30k ohm attenuation - I forgot that full clockwise is not 0 ohm on this attenuator - just checked with my lightspeed and all works fine.

I do not want to add all the other residual bypass/resistors/components and want to stay minimalistic like the original. I knew something simple was keeping it from working properly. I wonder if a real Gain Card world also oscillate in this setup without that 1k series resistor - I guess I can pay $5000 to purchase one to find out...nah.

Thanks for the help...
__________________
"I speak Spanish to God, Italian to Women, French to Men, and German to my Horse" - Charles V
  Reply With Quote

Reply


Hide this!Advertise here!

Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Getting rid of oscillations in the preamp engels Tubes / Valves 11 10th June 2007 09:23 PM
How to test for oscillations? Jye Chip Amps 13 20th October 2004 11:56 PM
Oscillations in P3A ?? Stormo Solid State 3 20th January 2003 09:34 PM
amplifier oscillations lowfi Pass Labs 33 29th May 2002 07:32 PM
Aleph 3 oscillations Koy Pass Labs 4 22nd April 2002 04:56 PM


New To Site? Need Help?

All times are GMT. The time now is 01:19 AM.

Page generated in 0.11559 seconds (83.01% PHP - 16.99% MySQL) with 11 queries

Copyright ©1999-2012 diyAudio