Hello all... I am building a gainclone amplifier using the non-inverting configuration, 17v rails and 1000uf filters... The power supply consists of a 12-0-12 tranformer and 8 fast recovery diodes. Everything connects to a custom PCB that I made. When I measure the DC offset I get approx 16.3 VDC from the speaker terminals. This is not the first one I have built however it is the first time I have experienced such high offset values, seems like an internal short of some sort. Any insight would be appreciated. thanks
can see 2 issues possible:
1. some resistor at either +input (signal) or -input (feedback pin)
is not properly in contact with GROUND (0V)
2. you have oscillation at output
I should check for these.
That you have attached components that effects input pins in a proper & correct way.
And of course that you hava a good PCB, without shortcuts.
And that you have one Zobel filter across output.
Usually something like 100nF in series with 4.7-10 Ohm resistor.
Even if another problem, I think you could find it simply by measuring voltage level at each pin of LM3875 (a guess 😉 ).
Without signal and maybe with some resistor as a DUMMY LOAD.
Does not have to be 8 OHM dummy Load.
For 17 Volt DC,
you can use >=1200 Ohm 0.5 Watt resistor
or >= 560 Ohm 1 Watt resistor
... this will let them take max 50% of rated power and they should survive worst case
1. some resistor at either +input (signal) or -input (feedback pin)
is not properly in contact with GROUND (0V)
2. you have oscillation at output
I should check for these.
That you have attached components that effects input pins in a proper & correct way.
And of course that you hava a good PCB, without shortcuts.
And that you have one Zobel filter across output.
Usually something like 100nF in series with 4.7-10 Ohm resistor.
Even if another problem, I think you could find it simply by measuring voltage level at each pin of LM3875 (a guess 😉 ).
Without signal and maybe with some resistor as a DUMMY LOAD.
Does not have to be 8 OHM dummy Load.
For 17 Volt DC,
you can use >=1200 Ohm 0.5 Watt resistor
or >= 560 Ohm 1 Watt resistor
... this will let them take max 50% of rated power and they should survive worst case
If everything is connected correctly, rail level DC at the output indicates a blown output transistor = IC.
I had this on an lm3875 once. The chip blew itself apart with a loud crack before as I was trying to identify the problem.
I required a stiff drink and a trip to the laundrymat after that one!
I required a stiff drink and a trip to the laundrymat after that one!
lineup said:can see 2 issues possible:
1. some resistor at either +input (signal) or -input (feedback pin)
is not properly in contact with GROUND (0V)
2. you have oscillation at output
I should check for these.
That you have attached components that effects input pins in a proper & correct way.
And of course that you hava a good PCB, without shortcuts.
And that you have one Zobel filter across output.
Usually something like 100nF in series with 4.7-10 Ohm resistor.
Even if another problem, I think you could find it simply by measuring voltage level at each pin of LM3875 (a guess 😉 ).
Without signal and maybe with some resistor as a DUMMY LOAD.
Does not have to be 8 OHM dummy Load.
For 17 Volt DC,
you can use >=1200 Ohm 0.5 Watt resistor
or >= 560 Ohm 1 Watt resistor
... this will let them take max 50% of rated power and they should survive worst case
pacificblue said:If everything is connected correctly, rail level DC at the output indicates a blown output transistor = IC.
justblair said:I had this on an lm3875 once. The chip blew itself apart with a loud crack before as I was trying to identify the problem.
I required a stiff drink and a trip to the laundrymat after that one!
Thanks for the assistance... I kinda figured as much...
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