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Commercial Gainclone kit- building instructions

Power up again with the bulb and measure the new and probably lower voltages of the PSU.

Power down and have a think.
What have you added or changed that is drawing so much current to pull the PSU down like that?

Can you go back a stage or two, or is there really only ONE change?
 
Thanks Andrew I will recheck things tomorrow when I get chance. I did'nt check the power supply voltages with the amp board connected but the bulb limited the mains voltage to about 90 volts. I will disconnect everything and recheck the pcb's with a magnifying glass.
 
Whoops I haven't done that in a long time😱 It was a solder bridge between two pins on the 4780. I connected the second channel and have an offset of 260mv on both channels. This is without the input connected the pot; wires just hanging. Will the offset drop when I connect it up?
 
If I short the input wires together and connect a dmm to the output the voltage rises and the bulb starts to glow. Have I cooked my chips?
With nothing connected the LM 4780's are running at 40 degrees Centigrade.
 
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Why would anybody suggest input caps if those voltages are only with attenuator and without any source connected yet? The input caps are needed in case the source producing the offset. I'm not familiar with LDR, but I don't think it's adding any offset?

Is it passable? How much offset do you read at normal listening levels? If you won't be exceeding 80mV or so, I would say it is passable. Otherwise you need NFB cap, not an input cap.
 
Thanks for the response Peter. I connected the integrated GainClone to my cd player and a pair of 4" Tandy speakers and it plays music; spent the last hour listening to J J Cale live. I never thought to check the dc when listening; I take it thats what you meant? I'll listen again tomorrow.
 
A couple of photo's. I won't get chance to listen until tomorrow and check offset dc.

SAM_0060.jpg


SAM_0061.jpg
 
Tried it out this morning and with the cd player and an old pair of speakers connected dc offset maxs out at 38mv on one channel and 46mv on the other. I've been listening to music for the past two hours and nothing overheats and sounds good too even through a crappy pair of 4" drivers.