I definitely have some cable tidying to do🤣.
I’ll be busy for a while with the list of things you’ve given me to try. Thanks!
I’ll be busy for a while with the list of things you’ve given me to try. Thanks!
Thx.
With RCA center +IN / outer GND / jumper -IN GND, there is a buzz.
With RCA center +IN / outer -IN, no buzz. Is it possible to keep this solution ? ...Is it dangerous ?
With RCA center +IN / outer GND / jumper -IN GND, there is a buzz.
With RCA center +IN / outer -IN, no buzz. Is it possible to keep this solution ? ...Is it dangerous ?
"The tweak with jumper in place:Thx.
With RCA center +IN / outer GND / jumper -IN GND, there is a buzz.
With RCA center +IN / outer -IN, no buzz. Is it possible to keep this solution ? ...Is it dangerous ?![]()
10ohm and a cut trace" ?? Should the circuit be cut ?
With RCA center +IN / outer -IN, no buzz. Is it possible to keep this solution ? ...Is it dangerous ?

Use XLR instead if you have that option.
Otherwise I will not recommend or approve that connection. Connect RCA as shown earlier. It’s just a jumper away.
Otherwise I will not recommend or approve that connection. Connect RCA as shown earlier. It’s just a jumper away.
I found a (perhaps the) mistake I made... I had mixed the transformer primary wires. I was wiring it like this:
After swapping 1 and 3, the buzz coming from the transformer is significantly reduced. The buzz coming out from the speaker also greatly reduced...
I happened upon freejazz00's posts while I was looking for ideas to try. I wonder if he had the same issue. The thermistors would definitely get hot.
My wiring definitely still needs to be redone and will try the hum breaker as well. I also have rectifier snubber boards from ThatcherDIYAudio I can try.
After swapping 1 and 3, the buzz coming from the transformer is significantly reduced. The buzz coming out from the speaker also greatly reduced...
I happened upon freejazz00's posts while I was looking for ideas to try. I wonder if he had the same issue. The thermistors would definitely get hot.
My wiring definitely still needs to be redone and will try the hum breaker as well. I also have rectifier snubber boards from ThatcherDIYAudio I can try.
Internal wiring inspired by works of Sergio Lione?
"There is no buzz if no amp boards are attached. It buzzes with one amp board is powered. It buzzes more when both channels are powered. So it seems to increase by load to the power supply. This is with no speakers attached! " ... so it ain't DC-on-mains issue
Can't see which wire goes where... you need to segregate wiring... low signal, DC, speakers, mains...
Drop bias to 400mV... that should help.
It seems that you have possible oscillations that might be causing excessive power drain from the toroids... measure the voltage drops across the PS PCB CRC... across Rs, and see what you have there. Then compare to see if the voltage drop across those resistors is the sum of the quiescent current from both AMP PCBs. Or, put an oscilloscope on V + and V - OUT, and check...
The best place for the snubber is as close as possible to the secondary wiring.... hence, you could install the snubbers on the bridge rectifiers... just use dual lugs and re-crimp... or use something like this:
View attachment 1230794
The fact that your speakers are buzzing as well tells me that you need an AMP PCB ground lift mod. Do you really need to keep RCA INs?
No gain, keep it like that, just add a jumper between GND and -IN and you will be rewarded. If buzz with jumper do the trace cut and add a resistor.If I connect like that I don't have any gain?
...with XLR sockets, is there less risk of buzz? It seems to me that those who have them do not encounter this problem.
What do you think ? ...if this can avoid desoldering the transistors and cutting the printed circuit...?
What do you think ? ...if this can avoid desoldering the transistors and cutting the printed circuit...?
Have you done the "rotate the donut" test? Input shorted to ground. Loosen up donut bolt a little. Put your ear up next to crappy test speaker. Or use a headphone tester as shown in this article: https://hifisonix.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Ground-Loops.pdf
Turn the donut until hum minimizes. There's a null point. Check the other channel.
Once that's optimized, tighten the bolt. Now start moving wires around in the amp with your ear up to the crappy test speaker or headphones. Does a certain position of input wire, speaker wires, PSU wires drop the noise floor?
Turn the donut until hum minimizes. There's a null point. Check the other channel.
Once that's optimized, tighten the bolt. Now start moving wires around in the amp with your ear up to the crappy test speaker or headphones. Does a certain position of input wire, speaker wires, PSU wires drop the noise floor?
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