Zapco SP 2000.1

±61KHz
I notice that the square wave takes on very strange shapes at very low frequencies during startup, for a few seconds, until it stabilizes. This only happens if I limit the input current to 3A.

I am attaching a photo of the square wave once the amplifier is working.
 

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No, after replacing all the driver transistors, they no longer heat up as much as before. Indeed, they reach 30° after about ten minutes without a heat sink. In fact, this morning, to measure the inductances I removed the heatsink again, and now I'm carrying out the tests without it.
 
I tested 1Khz and 20Hz at 1V input, and I get a pretty clean output signal. I haven't tested the amplifier at full capacity as I don't think those inductors will last long.

Yes, under the two inductors the board seems to have been heated.

At the output of the two inductances I obtain a rather low value. (Probe 1x)
 

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The 61k idle frequency seems a bit low and could cause undue heating of the inductors. You could try injecting a higher frequency (into the driver board) to see if the idle current drops.

Excess heating for a long period could change the property of the cores which could make them more lossy (less efficient).
 
I don't know if changing the value of the component to increase the frequency is the right solution. Let me explain better, I also thought about increasing the frequency in this way but I also think that if before burning out the output everything worked and absorbed less than 2A at idle, I imagine there is still something to check, probably broken or out of value . Correct me if I'm wrong

That said, I imagine that the ideal working frequency for this output section is around 120KHz, similar to many Korean amplifiers built this way.
 
I think the inductors are the problem. I think they ran too hot for too long and have changed properties.

Do you have inductors you can swap from a similar amp?

The self-oscillating amps typically drop in frequency at higher power output. This will compound the problem you have now and the low frequency may have caused the inductors to overheat, causing the problem you have now.

Do you know how hot the inductors were running previously?
 
One reason I hate (HATE) repairing self-oscillating amps is problems like this. Clocked amps have no guesswork.

I think it's operating at too low of a frequency. Other than the 1200pf cap, I don't know what to change to change the frequency. Maybe someone else here could see what a similar amp's idle frequency is.

The thermal damage to the board didn't happen overnight. It takes time.

The first thing I would do (if you aren't going to alter the frequency) is to find inductors that you could drop into the amp. They don't have to be exact. The information I have for a similar amp is that they use 73uH coils. The 68uH should be close enough but not of the cores are bad.

Do you have any inductors that are close to that value (or higher value) that you could install?
 
I don't know if it is possible to buy an inductance with the same values. I imagine it holds a lot of current, do you know any sellers who deal in merchandise like this?
The suppliers I know have maximum values of 68uH at max 3A and 73uH at 2A...