Of course it is under the heatsink. But why is it a large rectangle with no side connections when the MA12070 is a small square w/ connections on 4 sides?
It's defenitely the Ayima Jean Paul and I had ours open.
Why would the shape of the heatsink matter?
Why would the shape of the heatsink matter?
So then I need to change all five of them?That is the Aiyima A8 with 5 dual opamps. The MA12070 is under the heatsink of course.
Maybe there are two MA12070 under the heatsink!!! 🤔Why would the shape of the heatsink matter?
Best medical practice is to remove the cancer totally 😁 but some doctors have quite good results treating it.
That's heavy words for relatively innocent and versatile opamps. When applied correctly one can achieve very good results. Transformers are nice but also have some imperfections to say the least.
Not too much opamps of course. Five of them is much.
Not too much opamps of course. Five of them is much.
salut, 4 opamp me semble normal,,,, s'il y a deux entrées. L'autre doit être utilisé pour le basculement ?
Pour le contrôle d'entrée :incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain: . ENJOY !!!!!!!!!!!!
Pour le contrôle d'entrée :incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain: . ENJOY !!!!!!!!!!!!
I like the OPA1656 very much but if they are crammed in a very small single supply circuit that depents on tiny SMD caps before and after them, their potential is Limited.That's heavy words for relatively innocent and versatile opamps. When applied correctly one can achieve very good results. Transformers are nice but also have some imperfections to say the least.
Not too much opamps of course. Five of them is much.
Real good coupling caps over 2uf do not come in a tiny form factor. Or better said I don't know of any.
The device has a bass boost circuit and a set of active outputs. That is 2 dual opamps that are often not used. I would not buy a power amplifier to connect active loudspeakers via its pre out connectors?! The bass boost is for sure an unneeded gadget.salut, 4 opamp me semble normal,,,, s'il y a deux entrées. L'autre doit être utilisé pour le basculement ?
Pour le contrôle d'entrée :incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain::incertain: . ENJOY !!!!!!!!!!!!
The amplifier does not have 2 inputs, it has just 1 stereo unbalanced input. That could have been realised with just 1 dual opamp per channel.
Yes it is good to enjoy facts.
Last edited:
What about the existing circuit and 4 good caps over the ceramic ones? See earlier in this thread how that looks. Or replace the ceramic ones for 4 ultra miniature electrolytic caps?!? A small PCB with larger size SMD film caps but same pinout as the original 4 caps mounted above the 4 pins can be done.Ulimately I see no no getting around of attaching your four leads right before the chip and use spacers to let your prefered active stage, transformer, Tube, whatever hoover over the existing Board.
The IC performs best balanced which poses challenges when one has an unbalanced setup. With transformers an active stage is needed for right performance. The opamps sure are the most easy solution and likely with least distortion. For really good performance with transformers real good transformers are needed unless one wants an effect generator.
Last edited:
There was a time in my audio journey when I could not tell the differents between a mediocre and a good coupling cap, simply because my brain was to busy compensating for room modes, phase anomalities and early reflections. Now I can because most of those issues have been dealt with on the software side.
Many People with adeqate listening environments and good systems spend lots of time and money on finding the right coupling cap and rightfully so. There is of course the rule of diminishing returns.
I fond my favorite affordable long obsolet coupling cap. That thing is 60mm long and I have to get inventive to integrate it. I will try but I highly doubt that a bypassed ceramic in the signal path will cut it for me.
Many People with adeqate listening environments and good systems spend lots of time and money on finding the right coupling cap and rightfully so. There is of course the rule of diminishing returns.
I fond my favorite affordable long obsolet coupling cap. That thing is 60mm long and I have to get inventive to integrate it. I will try but I highly doubt that a bypassed ceramic in the signal path will cut it for me.
Maybe a 23 Euro amplifier is not the best device to start with. This one seems a better candidate. It has no opamps and input caps can be bridged with a jumper wire. Inputs are then by wire. I recommend the wires/connectors to be bought with the device.
https://www.audiophonics.fr/en/ampl...lifier-module-ma12070-160w-4-ohm-p-14732.html
BTW A predefined assumption will result in your mind to be right.
https://www.audiophonics.fr/en/ampl...lifier-module-ma12070-160w-4-ohm-p-14732.html
BTW A predefined assumption will result in your mind to be right.
Last edited:
I used those kind of hints for those who heard what I didn't hear, until I solved the room issues I didn't know I had.BTW A predefined assumption will result in your mind to be right.
Compression Drivers can sound from fabulous to irritating depending on the kind of coupling cap used.
The MA12070 chip itself is fantastic. There is no need for a different amp when all it takes is four wires sticking up 20mm from the board, to apply a proper activ stage.
Subject active stage with tiny lousy Caps.
Hardly recognizable when room issues are at play. Horns with compression drivers are very directional hence less room interactions and they have details in spates which reveals cheap caps like nothing else. Still same subject.
Subject change comes in from questioning ones hardware to questioning the listener.
Hardly recognizable when room issues are at play. Horns with compression drivers are very directional hence less room interactions and they have details in spates which reveals cheap caps like nothing else. Still same subject.
Subject change comes in from questioning ones hardware to questioning the listener.
- Home
- Amplifiers
- Class D
- Infineon MA12070 Class D