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Old 14th July 2005, 07:23 PM   #1
wardour is offline wardour  United States
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Default Getting Started With a Decent Background

Hello, ive been a long time lurker. I curently am more of a home theater person but recently I have been doing a lot more music listening. I currently run a pair of PSB Image 5T's, a 9C, a pair of Acouistic Energy evo3's, and a Velodyne VLF1012 all off of a Sony DA4ES.

I have an electric engineering background (computer engineering / hobby stuff). I have looked at a lot of schematics and designs and am fairly comfortable with all of it.

My goals are to eventually build a solid stereo system, using at the least a DIY amp design, and very possibly a DIY preamp.

For the speakers I have and the room I have, a 60-100W@8ohm amp should be sufficent. I just feel with so many designs and opinions floating around, I havent really found a thread that fits my situation.

I would like some examples of cost. Also I am interested in something that, has the potential to be a marked improvement over my current reciever (which has line level output).

Am I going to need to etch the board myself? Do people go the DIY route for reasons other than "its fun". Because honesty thats mostly why im here. I know I would love a project like this.

I also know that with components, you can pay whatever you want. What id like to hear are some ballpark figures for some amps that fit what im looking for.

Admittedly I have very little idea, what makes a good amp. I have read all of the articles at Pass Labs, and that only gave me the faintist of hints. Currently im looking for something just beyond the packaged kit, as I want quality, not just a learning project.

Thank You for anything you can tell me.

::Stuart
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Old 14th July 2005, 09:06 PM   #2
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If you look at the parts lists in some of the projects here and
elsewhere, you can cost quite a few of the ordinary parts at
Digikey. After that at a minimum you have a power transformer
and heat sinks. Power transformers and heat sinks you can
scrounge, and if you elect to buy a new transformer, take a look
at stock pieces by Plitron and Avel Lindberg. Depending on the
details, you can get a decent transformer from 30 to 40 dollars.

Too bad you don't live in Foresthill, where there's a company
with dumpster loads of slightly noisy or off-spec transformers.

How low can you go? I can build an amp for about $100, if I
make part of it from plywood.

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Old 14th July 2005, 09:21 PM   #3
ingrast is offline ingrast  Uruguay
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Default Choices choices ....

Stuart:

I suggest you first make up your mind about with which camp comes closer to your heart.

- There is the tube vs. solid state.
- There is the all out class A vs. class AB.
- There is the gainclone vs. discrete.
- You can go passive vs. active crossover.

Just to name some possibilities.

If you do not feel a particular sympathy, then my recommendation as for cost-effectiveness is a gainclone. An LM3886 will give 68W on 4 ohms or the dual chip LM4780 will provide over 120W on 8 ohms with state of the art monolithic performance and a fair immunity to assembly blunders. You can also get into ready made PCB's and parts group buys.

If you want to tweak and experiment, there are fully discrete or hybrid approaches, but the choices are so many I cannot suggest a particular one.

Rodolfo
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Old 14th July 2005, 09:28 PM   #4
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A lot of the answer also lies in your own inclinations. For example regarding your question on pcbs, to date I have built two headphone amplifiers, a preamplifier, and I am 90% through building a pair of 50W Aleph-X monoblocks. I have built all but one of the headphone amps using perfboard. The circuits might not look as pretty, but as far as I can tell they sound just as good, and no-one sees them unless I open up the chassis.

Some reference to costs:

I took a no-compromises approach to building my preamp, bought top quality parts (Holco resistors, Solen film caps, Panasonic FC electrolytics, a CRC plus regulation power supply big enough for the average power amp, Cardas and Neutrik connnectors, DH Labs wiring, prefabricated chassis, blanced stepped attenuator) and I built the whole thing for just under $500US.

My Aleph-X monoblocks I am also going for top performance approach, but I have scounged heatsinks and chassis materials from surplus stores to save some costs, and I figure in the end I'll have spent around $600US. Again, I am using premium parts throughout.

I think I can also say confidently that many here will find my costs to be high. I am a busy guy so I don't put a lot of effort into scrounging to keep costs down. That being said, in my mind at least, my projects stack up sonically against components costing thousands of dollars each. In short, save a bunch of money and have a boatload of fun, what's not to like!

Cheers, Terry
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Old 14th July 2005, 09:43 PM   #5
SY is offline SY  United States
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I'm moving this over to Introductions, just to keep things neat and tidy.

From one Stuart to another, welcome to the forum!
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Old 14th July 2005, 09:53 PM   #6
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"...dumpster loads of slightly noisy or off-spec transformers."

Sigh.

All I've got around here are dumpster loads of rusty mufflers and bald tires. High tech in this neck of the woods consists of fuel injection--still called 'fool injection' by some who think it's funny, in spite of the joke having gotten old thirty years ago.
Man, what I wouldn't give to have access to such useful castoffs. I must have been really, really bad in a previous incarnation.
wardour,
I'm not clear on whether you're looking forward to doing PC boards or dreading it. On one hand, you can sometimes find a pre-made board ready for a project that you want to do. There are frequently group buys for such things here. On the other hand, you can do your own if you want. I've done scads of boards on my own. I like the layout process, but am less enthusiastic about some of the nonsense I have to go through to get that pattern onto the board prior to etching it. Etching is trivial--a fifth-grader could do it with one hand tied behind his back.
Go for it.

Grey
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Old 14th July 2005, 10:24 PM   #7
Variac is offline Variac  United States
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Is that company Passlabs?

I second the $500 price for a 2 channel Aleph of some sort, and the quality is top tier. Of course scrounging helps a LOT. Those class A amps are always going to require big power supplies and lotsa heatsinks. There are lots of new, surplus stores on the web and e-Bay. Tracking down the parts at a good price is a big part of the process

A 2 channel chip amp can easily be under $200 with all new parts including case.
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Old 14th July 2005, 10:59 PM   #8
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Regardless of what you choose, welcome to the forums Stuart. I hope you find all you need and more.

Cal
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Old 14th July 2005, 11:00 PM   #9
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Default Re: Getting Started With a Decent Background

Quote:
Originally posted by wardour
Am I going to need to etch the board myself? Do people go the DIY route for reasons other than "its fun". Because honesty thats mostly why im here. I know I would love a project like this.
Well, you've gotten a lot of advice from heavyweights, so there is little I can add, except maybe on this very topic of "fun". I do it almost solely for the fun aspect, I'm actually barely into the audiophile enjoyment side of the hobby, but enjoy the woodworking and soldering side of things more. And so you question about etching boards is very pertinent. Sure you can do what some do here and just go whole hog on everything, and I totally respect that and one day I might do it that way. But if you find something that is difficult to do the hardcore audiophile way, don't worry about it, worry about moving forward having fun. Use perfboard. Use thin gauge stranded wire on hand. Make your driver cutouts with a jigsaw. Use regular plywood for an enclosure. Just have fun foremost.
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Old 15th July 2005, 10:07 AM   #10
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Default Getting started with no background...

The costs estimates I have been hearing in these posts seem a bit low to me...

I am brand new to all of this and am only a short way into my first project. All materials have been purchased however. Maybe I've just made some poor purchasing decisions, or haven't scrounged enough, but My amplifiers are costs way more than $500. I have logged my expenses throughout my project and don't mind sharing them if you are interested.

Keep in mind that I am brand new to all of this and have a DMM and Soldering Iron included in my figures. I had a second cheaper fluke meter on hand as well as a 12v regulated power supply used for matching.

I got some random parts cheap. The cans and power resistors were used along with the expensive heatsinks off of ebay. I got my toroids from partsexpress.com

I'm building a large pair of ALeph-X monoblocks at 25volts and 12 amps of bias. Pretty much they are way more than it sounds like you need, but it required 2 625VA toroids each and I went with 208,000uf of capacitance per channel. Like I said kinda over-kill. I also went with some expensive connectors.

Here have a look. Kinda makes you consider your desired output power...
Attached Files
File Type: txt budget.txt (649 Bytes, 21 views)
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