I would like to turn our attention to output relays again. A colleague of mine has just made an extremely interesting measurement, on a power amp, that usually has almost no distortion. He has measured a huge 3rd harm. now, and spent whole day finding the problem. It was output relay. Look:
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PMA said:I would like to turn our attention to output relays again. A colleague of mine has just made an extremely interesting measurement, on a power amp, that usually has almost no distortion. He has measured a huge 3rd harm. now, and spent whole day finding the problem. It was output relay. Look:
It is a common problem - I've observed it many times. When an output relay contacts deteriorate, huge distortion may occur, mostly 3rd order. It is usually happening after the relay was subjected to a fault condition in the amplifier or if the relay driving circuit does not engage the relay properly, for example it the coil current rises slowly and the relay switches at the lowest possible voltage.
Alex
PMA said:I would like to turn our attention to output relays again. A colleague of mine has just made an extremely interesting measurement, on a power amp, that usually has almost no distortion. He has measured a huge 3rd harm. now, and spent whole day finding the problem. It was output relay. Look:
A well known issue. In the forum contect, it was addressed at least by Bob Cordell here:
http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=1469876#post1469876
and by yours truly here:
http://www.synaesthesia.ca/Auxiliary-circuitry.html
"Care should be taken when selecting the output relays. A high current model with silver contacts is definitely recommended. We experimented with a number of relays and definitely some cheap models are introducing an inacceptable level of distortions due to improper contacts materials and/or mechanics."
I have often made people aware of the special-purpose speakers relays from Amplimo. These have a 100A tungsten main contact that closes first, and then is bridged by a gold contact. When opened, the reverse takes place. It takes care of the issues mentioned above. It's indeed a 'high-power signal relay'.
Jan Didden
Jan Didden
Amplimo/ILP has been selling it for some 2 decades, likely more people are perfectly happy with the LR-Z.
such relays with advanced tungsten and delayed silver contact, were made by Schrack, Austria and even by a GDR company in the past.
Regards
Regards
Juergen Knoop said:such relays with advanced tungsten and delayed silver contact, were made by Schrack, Austria and even by a GDR company in the past.
Regards
It's a simple engineering thing. You have a requirement, you engineer a solution. But no, time and time again somebody laments: 'arghhh! the relay sounds bad!'. Deja vu all over again.
Jan Didden
Jan, your comment does not help, your recommendation does. Nothing was said about sound, just measurement. Do not remember anybody else has shown.
janneman said:
But no, time and time again somebody laments: 'arghhh! the relay sounds bad!'.
Unfortunately it's more like "the relays sound bad".
PMA said:Jan, your comment does not help, your recommendation does. Nothing was said about sound, just measurement. Do not remember anybody else has shown.
Ahh yes. I was generalizing, not addressing a specific post.
Don't take it personal 😉
Jan Didden
syn08 said:
Unfortunately it's more like "the relays sound bad".
Well, I'm sure there must be a deeper meaning behind this, but it escapes me just now...
Jan Didden
Relays CAN sound bad, but if they are working properly, they can be a practical approach to several difficult problems.
monopoles
Please John, keep me informed.
BTW, you can buy 'those puppies' here, only $1.25. Moreover, they sell more niceties like 'Zero-Resistance Wire -various gauges available'.
Cheers,
Edmond.
jneutron said:Hey, symmetry demands those puppies..
I'll let ya know how the monpole detector works out. I think they're installing in in the next couple of weeks. (I'm not joking)..
We made a styrofoam box 8 feet tall, 3 feet by 3 feet, radiused the corners, and covered inside and out with mu metal..then the physicist came to me and said""can you degauss this thing??? And no, we have no money...
[snip]
Cheers, John
Please John, keep me informed.
BTW, you can buy 'those puppies' here, only $1.25. Moreover, they sell more niceties like 'Zero-Resistance Wire -various gauges available'.
Cheers,
Edmond.
john curl said:Relays CAN sound bad, but if they are working properly, they can be a practical approach to several difficult problems.
I would suggest the following approach that in my opinion should sovle many problems. Although it is known, it is still good and carefull enginering practice.
First use the RZ relay which is a good component.
Second, protect your contacts optimally in the following way ( see Ott's book for a complete treatment)
Avoid glow discharge by keeping surge voltage under 300V
Avoid arc discharge by keeping Voltage rise time under 1V per microseconde.
Glow is avoided by clamping on BOTH sides of the contact with clamping diodes to rail. You have inductance on both sides so be carefull, it costs nothing.
Arc is avoided by using a capacitor shunting the contact but NO serie resistor.
The goal is to avoid on opening a surge voltage rise time higher than 1V/microsec. This is equivalent to C ( in microfarads) higher than I load max ( in Amps).
A resistor in serie is often used to attenuate the high inrush current on closing. The capacitor has the full voltage then.
But then on opening there will be some voltage induced by this resistor and some initial arcing which is to be totally avoided in audio. The obvious way is NOT to use this resistor and switch the contact on before applying any signal and avoid offset.
Well known but not to often seen.
JPV
Re: magnetic monopoles
Sorry guys, something went wrong with above link. I mean this one:
http://www.gnu.org/fun/jokes/physics.html
edit: Thanks Cauhtemoc (posts were just crossing)
Edmond Stuart said:
Sorry guys, something went wrong with above link. I mean this one:
http://www.gnu.org/fun/jokes/physics.html
edit: Thanks Cauhtemoc (posts were just crossing)
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