MOSFET simply blew up ?

Status
Not open for further replies.
I have made about 30 amplifiers using IRFP240/9240 MOSFET's

I aligned one of the 30 amplifiers setting the output dc offset and the bias current.
After about 5 minutes the fuses blew along with the output transistors despite running at a quiet level.
The blown transistors were very hot.
The other 29 amplifiers have had no problems at all.
I replaced the output transistors and the amp has run fine now for a week !

Does anyone know if MOSFET's do just sometimes pack up?

Or perhaps the bias current ran away for some reason ?
 
Did you notice any oscillation? Mos devices are very fast and can become an oscillator at many MHz if certain parts of the ‘internal circuitry’ are not dampened properly or may have bad contact. RF oscillation can appear as DC on a multimeter and can cause frustrating destruction.
 
Did you notice any oscillation? Mos devices are very fast and can become an oscillator at many MHz if certain parts of the ‘internal circuitry’ are not dampened properly or may have bad contact. RF oscillation can appear as DC on a multimeter and can cause frustrating destruction.

The VAS capacitor is 220pf which is much more than otehr people use.
It is probably overdamped rather than underdamped.
 
The last time I had a mosfet amp blow up was one I was repairing and was a C-Audio something or other, it turned out I'd been sent fake mosfets. I just replaced them with expensive ones and it worked great.

Yes I replaced the blown pair of MOSFETs and it has been fine since.
I have kept this pcb for myself for playing at home. If there is any doubt about an amplifier I dont let them out to customers.

The MOSFET's are marked IRFP so I assume they are good quality from IR.
 
The VAS capacitor is 220pf which is much more than otehr people use.
It is probably overdamped rather than underdamped.

My apologies for being vague, I was regarding to the mosfet itself outside of the CL, they can be great oscillators because of the lead inductance and the device capacitances which can resonate at MHz frequencies. Vertical types particularly. At 50+MHz range the lead inductance and PCB trace/layout can become problematic. Oscillations at this speed will pass right over the global loop and affect the bias stability of the mosfet. Most good mosfet amps have some sort of damping within close proximity other than just a gate stopper. If you find this type of instability to be a problem, you might try adding a gate Zobel filter to each fet. Maybe with a zero around 40MHz, say 27pf in series with 150R from gate to gnd. I find it can be very helpful in stabilizing mosfet followers, vertical types, hexfets and such.
 
Last edited:
My apologies for being vague, I was regarding to the mosfet itself outside of the CL, they can be great oscillators because of the lead inductance and the device capacitances which can resonate at MHz frequencies. Vertical types particularly. At 50+MHz range the lead inductance and PCB trace/layout can become problematic. Oscillations at this speed will pass right over the global loop and affect the bias stability of the mosfet. Most good mosfet amps have some sort of damping within close proximity other than just a gate stopper. If you find this type of instability to be a problem, you might try adding a gate Zobel filter to each fet. Maybe with a zero around 40MHz, say 27pf in series with 150R from gate to gnd. I find it can be very helpful in stabilizing mosfet followers, vertical types, hexfets and such.

Before powering up for the first time I always put a scope proble on the output to look for excessive dc or ac.

I havent seen many designs with filters on the MOSFET gates, there is usually just a resistor.
 
Often amplifiers can errupt without load or reason -- other than out of the batch of components one rogue component may have got through all the quality checks; just so happens to go critical inside your amplifier.

With your burn in time you are operating a quality policy for your customers so they're not disappointed. This is really nice to see in an age of instant profiteering and throw away consumerism. 😉

It's better the issues manifest prior to getting to the client.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.