Cause of dc thump at turn on

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Have an amp which exhibits a hard turn on DC voltage at turn on.
Can see voltage up to 10 or more volts on the unloaded output at turn on.
This settles down after the amp is on for 10 or more seconds. This is also
only on one channel. The amp has seperate power supplies with bridges
for each channel. Any directions to look at ? Some of my ideas have
ranged from a bad bridge rectifier ( leaky) to damaged transistor in one
of the drive sections. Voltages appear fine at the outputs ( reference
to other channel). Any ideas as to locating this would be helpful..
 
How much 'thump' voltage when the output is loaded?
A 'thump' usually means that one side of the bipolar power supply is coming up before the other side of the supply. Could be that the electrolytic capacitors in the power supply have lost some capacitance.
 
DC offset thump

Hi I appreciate the responses and it does appear that the caps are on the
way out. On observing discharge after power off the caps on the defective
channel have substantially less voltage remaining after a short period of time
IE bad channel 13 volts remained charged versus the good channel having
a charge remaining above 30 volts. I experienced this condition starting
after trying to drive some Apogee Calipers for a short while at lower volume
and a loud hum occured. I have not tried to drive the Apogees again but
am also looking to replace the bridges as well. ( could be the cause....).
In response as the amplifier it is an early 90's PS Audio Delta 100..
 
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