how to distinguish phenolic pcb from the appearance alone?

Status
This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.
on a side note, do all phenolic boards start emitting that 'sweet vintage amp' smell once they're old enough? i have an older sansui model from 1974 (AU D907) that can fill the whole living room with that lemony musk that i now know to be associated with the phenol resin- which I also learned that is not too good for my health. so now I'm on the lookout for a vintage amp, (pre 1990s preferably, for a higher price/fidelity ratio) with fiberglass pcb. sigh, i know it's probably easier to diy at this point but i'm not too confident with a solder...
 
Yes they do have that musky smell once the heatsinks/parts started to warm up, I have a Pioneer M73 with large dimly lit VU meter on the front and a Pioneer SA-610 with an unusual tone control arrangement. The tone control is incorporated on the feedback network of the power amp. It has this haunting ice blue fluorescent level meter on the front. I love vintage amp they were built to last.
 
Member
Joined 2010
Paid Member
Phenolic looks like a poor quality "Formica" laminate. I think it is paper layers in a thermosetting resin.
Quite so. The Phenolic name is used generically and covers melamine and urea plastics too which are similarly processed but translucent where phenolic is dark brown or black like the old tag strips and canvas reinforced (Tufnol) laminates from "toob" days.
Laminex or Formica (Melamine) sheet is quite similar to phenolic board. You would not say these boards smelled of lemony musk unless you mean stale cat pee or something else organic but unpleasant. This odour is accompanied by formaldehyde which is sharp alright and probably accounts for the health concerns but at the ppm exposures you get in an average home, that's unlikely. The melamine surfaces in your kitchen and storage cupboards and binder of MDF and particle board will contribute 100s of times more. There, you have another concern to fret about.:rolleyes:

The thing is, with FR4 and similar being fibreglass reinforced epoxy resin, they "ring" as hard and dense material even though quite translucent. They wear ordinary drills and saws out quickly and the residue is a white powder.

Phenolic boards are much softer and flexible. They drill, cut and break easily, just like Laminex and are often thinner, tan coloured yet more opaque because of the paper layers. They emit that urea-like odour for ever, it seems.:(

A quick test....Hold the soldering iron to an edge of the board until a whisp of smoke appears. Sniff it. Epoxy resin also has a nasty odour when heated but not as sharp. Check the laminate for glass fibres glistening along the edge as per audiomachines' comment. OK? The green lacquer on boards is solder masking and has been used on all laminate types for many years.

Yes, developing resins for these laminates was once my profession.:eek:
 
Last edited:
Yes they do have that musky smell once the heatsinks/parts started to warm up, I have a Pioneer M73 with large dimly lit VU meter on the front and a Pioneer SA-610 with an unusual tone control arrangement. The tone control is incorporated on the feedback network of the power amp. It has this haunting ice blue fluorescent level meter on the front. I love vintage amp they were built to last.


that was a good point there audiomachines ...there was also plenty of yamaha models that worked by the same logic ...

there was wonderfull sonics produced by this type of circuits the problem was that depenting on the load ( type and impendance of speaker/ cable length and capacitance /orientation and calculation of zobel /quality of xover) the amplifier could become even unstable since a bit of gain more was required to operate with the specific tone control so most of the companies that copy that from sansui quickly quickly moved to a standard topology with transitor or ic to buffer the tone control ...

now days one could actually try to either improove such an idea or match it to a specific setup a specific source and volume control and specific amp ...i say that since designing of such a circuit will have to be moded to fit each and every amp ...

good reminder tough sonics produced from hose circuits are unbeatable
 
that was a good point there audiomachines ...there was also plenty of yamaha models that worked by the same logic ...

there was wonderfull sonics produced by this type of circuits the problem was that depenting on the load ( type and impendance of speaker/ cable length and capacitance /orientation and calculation of zobel /quality of xover) the amplifier could become even unstable since a bit of gain more was required to operate with the specific tone control so most of the companies that copy that from sansui quickly quickly moved to a standard topology with transitor or ic to buffer the tone control ...

now days one could actually try to either improove such an idea or match it to a specific setup a specific source and volume control and specific amp ...i say that since designing of such a circuit will have to be moded to fit each and every amp ...

good reminder tough sonics produced from hose circuits are unbeatable

I agree with you 100% my friend, unbeatable sonics. On the side note I have serviced some "BIG names" proamp that utilizes "fusible resistors" on the bias servo ckt. diff. stage, current mirror etc. Are they trying to comply with some regulations? For me these is a bad idea, you'll get the picture when this "fusible" opens up when the amp is subjected to voltage surges, which is very common in the field. I think rail fuses were enough. Fusible resistor on strategic point on the amp plus a crowbar ckt. A very bad combination:flame: then:dead:then:RIP: :D:D:D
 
so what do you think is that I'm most likely smelling? as I say, it's lemony- which means it's acidic more than anything else, and then it's joined by a 'musk' that's usually associated with antique furnitures and such- old, dusty smell. I saw from quick googling that phenol smells acidy; which's why I guessed that the smell is from the board. but the same board material is used all throughout the amp yet on other sections no smell is emitted. just near the tone control where old alps pots sit with their oils leaking. which makes me wonder if it's some kind of interaction between the oil and the amp. the oil itself does not have the smell in question and the smell is not sharp at all, so I doubt it's any kid of solvent... I hope.

p.s. melamine off-gases? this is a shocking news to me.
 
Member
Joined 2010
Paid Member
Smelly PCB

so what do you think is that I'm most likely smelling? The same board material is used all throughout the amp yet on other sections no smell is emitted. just near the tone control where old alps pots sit with their oils leaking.
....................................
I doubt anyone could offer any better guess here than you.....one board smells and the others don't.....The only different operation likely is perhaps hand soldering and fluxing of the pots (posted by pjp) as opposed to only wave soldering or such with the other boards, It must be quite a stench from this one little board to have you concerned about the odour when the lid is on.

OTOH, oil leaking from the ALPS pots? This seems odd to me unless they have been getting an oiling to silence scratchiness or the amp gets hot enough to melt the grease originally used. There's something fishy here and its not just the PCB resin smell.
....................................
melamine off-gases? this is a shocking news to me.
Not normally a problem with melamine-formaldehyde, but the sheer mass of MDF, Particle board and facing laminates going into modern dwellings with a significant amount of substandard product means that even small emissions will accumulate in poorly ventilated rooms, if only as an irritant. I should add that there are other materials going into homes that are just as potentially harmful. Of course, simple precautions like good ventilation will reduce the threat, but we don't always do that in winter, do we? :rolleyes:
 
Status
This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.