TPA3118D2 is not working

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I followed the reference design. But don't know why the circuit is not working. Can you put your opinion why the design is not working ?

When I power up the circuits, R12 (10 ohms) is getting very hot and starts smoking and the whole circuits take almost 1.1 Amp without any load.
 

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I further investigated and didn't find any short in the layout. and discovered that R8, R12, R14 and R17 all are heating up ! It seems C20, C29, C33 and C43 are not shorted , but when I power the board they gets shorted ! Strange !
 
Attached is the picture of my PCB. I didn't use any load.

I also powered the board with 5V power supply and observe the waveshape across the R8, R12, R14 and R17 resistors. It seems that they are oscillating at 390 Khz rate. Thats why current is flowing through the resistors and heating up.. Whats the reason of this oscillation ?
 

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Always have a load on the amp when powered. Damage may occur if not loaded.

To reduce noise pickup without drive have a 1K or lower on the inputs.

The "oscillation" is the 400KHz switching frequency.

How can I prevent the oscillation without load ? As the scenario is such that their may not be load present when I turn on the amp.

Do you mean to use a 1k resistor to pull down the input just after input cap ?
 
How can I prevent the oscillation without load ? As the scenario is such that their may not be load present when I turn on the amp.

You use MUTE. It really doesn't prevent the "oscillation" as such but it's not present on the outputs when muted.

If you really want to kill the "oscillation", you turn off the amp. As said the "oscillation" is the switching frequency and as such the basis of the working principle of a class D amp. If you don't want it, build a class AB amp instead.
 
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You use MUTE. It really doesn't prevent the "oscillation" as such but it's not present on the outputs when muted.

If you really want to kill the "oscillation", you turn off the amp. As said the "oscillation" is the switching frequency and as such the basis of the working principle of a class D amp. If you don't want it, build a class AB amp instead.

Thanks for the info.

But I have seen couple of Class D car amps, powered without connecting speaker. So there might be some kind of mechanism to damp the oscillation. How can I do that ?
 
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