Official M2 schematic

I made a rookie mistake and swapped Q1 and Q2 (044 and 9240) on one channel. I only noticed when I saw the 0R47 resistors R13 and R14 in that channel glow red and quickly switched off the amp. The fets were mounted on their big modushop heatsinks and the amp was only on for perhaps 10 seconds.
I removed the resistors and mosfets and used a dmm to test the on and off charateristics of the mosfets (using some utube videos as a guide). They seemed to be ok, so I put them in their correct position and put fresh 0R47 resistors in.

I tested the amp today. No smoke :cool:

I was able to get the offset nicely to 0mV and let it cook for a bit. I then hooked it up to a source and my test speakers and thought I only heard one channel. I swapped source and speaker cables to make sure the fault was in the amp, checked continuity between the input rca and the board which was fine. After disconnecting the speaker of the working channel I noticed the 2nd channel was actually playing, only at much lower volume and sounded muffled (no highs).

What could I have fried? Is it the mosfets (the simple test showed they were ok but perhaps they don't like the treatment received)? I hope not because I used my last 9240.
Or could it be the 4N35?
The other smaller resistors (Dale RN55) all looked fine.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
 

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Official Court Jester
Joined 2003
Paid Member
you can use 9140 a well, just take care to have same types in both channels

anyhow, schooling, you paid it cheap actually

from now on, if in situation that you can't see type of part when mounted, use old trick (from those who paid same school***) - always paint N channel parts pins with red sharpie

or put piece of paper tape on edge of part or whatever......



*** had one channel of Babelfish M25 assembled with N channels, second with P channels
 
We've all been there. I swapped the push for the pull output transistors in my very first build - my a40 - about 20 years ago. It smoked one channel's worth of output devices, a handful of resistors, and one or two of the small signal transistors that drove the outputs. It was so disappointing to have worked for so long on my first amp only to see the magic smoke escape with the first power up.

Having learned my lesson, I now use a dim bulb tester and a variac for first power up. I still check things three or four times before I power up for the first time... I'm sure Zen will label me a sissy for my precautions, but I'm good with that :cool:.
 
Member
Joined 2018
Paid Member
What is the definition/difference of signal transformer and autoformer with primary and secondary connected.? I saw ZM post saying latter being 5+1v gain or something. So am I just getting a bit more gain with autoformer setup or is there more to it?
I don't have Edcor but do have some Chinesuem shielded 600:20k I'd like to try on a preliminary build and have the option to wire however I like!
 
After mistakingly swapping the NPN and PNP mosfets, I ordered replacement 9240s (I had spare 044s).
My new 9240s came in so I dismantled the amplifier and replaced both mosfets in the affacted left channel. After putting it back together again the problem remains the same. The unaffected channel sounds great but the affected channel is much lower gain (I have to disconnect the right speaker to hear it properly because it is so much softer). Also the sound from the affected channel is not as clear and sounds a bit distorted.

[Yes, I have swapped input cables to make sure it was not the source and also swapped speaker cables to make sure the problem really was caused by the left channel of the amp. It uses a single psu for both channels, and the other channel works fine, so it is not caused by the psu. Also, before taking the F5 board out and replacing them by the M2 boards, the F5 had worked fine, so I know the psu was working.]

Besides replacing the mosfets, I previously checked all the soldering, resistor values, diode directions, etc but found nothing wrong.

After putting it back together again today (same problem), I have taken the amp apart again and have the affected left channel pcb and heatsink on my workbench. I will check all resistor values again later this week, as well as diode directions and anything else I can think of.

A few questions.

1. I remember during testing a week or so ago, both heatsink were getting warm, so I assume the bias circuitry is working. Nevertheless, would a defective 4N35 or LM385 cause a similar result?

2. Assuming the mosfets are working fine (judging by the heatsinks warming up), can this be caused by a defective Edcor?

Thanks
 
I just need to screw the pcb and transistors back to the heatsink to test iq. I'll use my bench psu to check.

Assuming the output stage is fine, how can I test the input stage?
The strange thing offset was easy to get to 0mV, and it does play music, just very softly and not as clear as the other channel.

Possible problem with the edcor?
 
Official Court Jester
Joined 2003
Paid Member
it's simple as taking any signal source and feeding input of an amp, then measuring points of interest
it can be output of laptop with simplest prog playing 1K sine

that signal any semi-decent DMM can measure

so, measure input signal - say 200mV (set by you )

measure what you have on buffer output node

measure what you have on Edcor output

in all steps,. black probe to GND, red to mentioned node, DMM set to Vac, no load at output of amp needed

if you need specific info about nodes, post exact schm or link to