Hello Everyone.
I have a Harmon Kardon A401 integrated amplifier. I bought it new in 1976. Later I sold it to a friend who returned as junk a few years ago. I replaced all the electrolytics and the output transistors. It works again and sounds alright. My question is if I replace the small signal transistors with up to date versions will it sound better? Or is it a waste of time and money? I've attached a list of those transistors. Most are no longer available so I would have to find substitutes.
Thanks, Kevin
I have a Harmon Kardon A401 integrated amplifier. I bought it new in 1976. Later I sold it to a friend who returned as junk a few years ago. I replaced all the electrolytics and the output transistors. It works again and sounds alright. My question is if I replace the small signal transistors with up to date versions will it sound better? Or is it a waste of time and money? I've attached a list of those transistors. Most are no longer available so I would have to find substitutes.
Thanks, Kevin
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I would never replace semiconductors in an amp unless they are definitely faulty.
Putting in faster transistors can result in oscillation and/or instability.
So I would just leave them be.
Electrolytics are the things that age fastest so replacing those was the right way to go.
Putting in faster transistors can result in oscillation and/or instability.
So I would just leave them be.
Electrolytics are the things that age fastest so replacing those was the right way to go.
Thanks Nigel. I'm a tube guy so I know little about transistors. Some of the electrolytics seemed to be glued to the boards. I guess that was the electrolytic leaking out of them?
Most of the time the 'glue' is there to mechanically stabilize the part. Electrolytic capacitors tend to be a bit massive, and gluing them to the board helps prevent mechanical stress failure of the leads. But leakage is certainly possible.
Changing the transistors won't change the sound quality at all... and as Nigel hints at, if you make a wrong choice it could bring new issues to the table.
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