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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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Hello and Happy New Year all,
I've got a Luxman R117 receiver here that breaks into a wild oscillation when the amp is pushed. I believe that it occurs when the amp switches from the low B+ rails to the high B+ rails. Turning up the treble control seems to make it worse, but that might be a red herring. I've changed all of the electrolytic capacitors in the tone circuit, I've tested and substituted the 4 main filter caps. I've check the suppression network on the output.I this this is some sort of decoupling problem, but I've sent way too much time on this receiver. A friend who worked on these when they were under warranty has looked it over as well, and we're both stumped. Anyone in the group seen anything like this on a Luxman R117? Many thanks, Tim Schwartz Bristol Electronics |
#2
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Tim Schwartz wrote in message
... Hello and Happy New Year all, I've got a Luxman R117 receiver here that breaks into a wild oscillation when the amp is pushed. I believe that it occurs when the amp switches from the low B+ rails to the high B+ rails. Turning up the treble control seems to make it worse, but that might be a red herring. I've changed all of the electrolytic capacitors in the tone circuit, I've tested and substituted the 4 main filter caps. I've check the suppression network on the output.I this this is some sort of decoupling problem, but I've sent way too much time on this receiver. A friend who worked on these when they were under warranty has looked it over as well, and we're both stumped. Anyone in the group seen anything like this on a Luxman R117? Many thanks, Tim Schwartz Bristol Electronics Audio or ultrasonic osc? What happens with reduced rails via variac? |
#3
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Both channels or just one channel?
All speakers, or just one particular model? Does it occur with a purely resistive load? Does it occur when the amp is unloaded? Are you using oddball speaker cables? (I've seen pathological interaction.) Here's a thought... Could it be the amplifier rapidly switching between the high and low rails? Have you worked through the circuitry that "decides" when to make the switch? If the oscillation were at 2x or 4x the input frequency, that would strong evidence. |
#4
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On Tue, 04 Jan 2011 08:39:31 -0500, Tim Schwartz
wrote: Hello and Happy New Year all, I've got a Luxman R117 receiver here that breaks into a wild oscillation when the amp is pushed. I believe that it occurs when the amp switches from the low B+ rails to the high B+ rails. Turning up the treble control seems to make it worse, but that might be a red herring. I've changed all of the electrolytic capacitors in the tone circuit, I've tested and substituted the 4 main filter caps. I've check the suppression network on the output.I this this is some sort of decoupling problem, but I've sent way too much time on this receiver. A friend who worked on these when they were under warranty has looked it over as well, and we're both stumped. Anyone in the group seen anything like this on a Luxman R117? Many thanks, Tim Schwartz Bristol Electronics Is there a possibility that someone has changed the outputs or drivers with faster transistors than the OEMs? Chuck |
#5
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A question... Have you stuck a 'scope on the output to see what the
"oscillation" looks like? |
#6
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On 1/4/2011 9:35 AM, William Sommerwerck wrote:
Both channels or just one channel? All speakers, or just one particular model? Does it occur with a purely resistive load? Does it occur when the amp is unloaded? Are you using oddball speaker cables? (I've seen pathological interaction.) Here's a thought... Could it be the amplifier rapidly switching between the high and low rails? Have you worked through the circuitry that "decides" when to make the switch? If the oscillation were at 2x or 4x the input frequency, that would strong evidence. Hello, I've only run the receiver on test equipment. Sine wave in, 8 ohm non-inductive load (Dale NH250 resistors) and I'm looking at it on a scope. Both channels, both outputs. The test set up is the one I always use, and other amps do not have this issue. I have tried one channel at a time with the same result. Speaker cables are 16 gauge 'zip cord'. I've never left it up for more than a moment, because the current draw is 8+ amps on the 120V line. It's a very high frequency oscillation, but I can't really see the waveform to describe it, as I don't want to blow up the amp. All semiconductors are original. Thanks for your input, Tim Schwartz Bristol Electronics |
#7
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On 1/4/2011 9:27 AM, N_Cook wrote:
Tim wrote in message ... Hello and Happy New Year all, I've got a Luxman R117 receiver here that breaks into a wild oscillation when the amp is pushed. I believe that it occurs when the amp switches from the low B+ rails to the high B+ rails. Turning up the treble control seems to make it worse, but that might be a red herring. I've changed all of the electrolytic capacitors in the tone circuit, I've tested and substituted the 4 main filter caps. I've check the suppression network on the output.I this this is some sort of decoupling problem, but I've sent way too much time on this receiver. A friend who worked on these when they were under warranty has looked it over as well, and we're both stumped. Anyone in the group seen anything like this on a Luxman R117? Many thanks, Tim Schwartz Bristol Electronics Audio or ultrasonic osc? What happens with reduced rails via variac? Hello Nigel, It's an ultrasonic oscillation, and a lower line voltage does not help. Thanks for your time, Tim Bristol Electronics |
#8
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Ouch! Full-power ultrasonic oscillation! I guess that pretty much rules out
all of my suggestions. Of course, the fact that it oscillates on both channels strongly suggests something common to both channels. I wouldn't completely rule out the possibility that something is wrong with the B+ switching circuit. Maybe you should convert the amp to power an ultrasonic cleaner! "Tim Schwartz" wrote in message ... On 1/4/2011 9:35 AM, William Sommerwerck wrote: Both channels or just one channel? All speakers, or just one particular model? Does it occur with a purely resistive load? Does it occur when the amp is unloaded? Are you using oddball speaker cables? (I've seen pathological interaction.) Here's a thought... Could it be the amplifier rapidly switching between the high and low rails? Have you worked through the circuitry that "decides" when to make the switch? If the oscillation were at 2x or 4x the input frequency, that would strong evidence. Hello, I've only run the receiver on test equipment. Sine wave in, 8 ohm non-inductive load (Dale NH250 resistors) and I'm looking at it on a scope. Both channels, both outputs. The test set up is the one I always use, and other amps do not have this issue. I have tried one channel at a time with the same result. Speaker cables are 16 gauge 'zip cord'. I've never left it up for more than a moment, because the current draw is 8+ amps on the 120V line. It's a very high frequency oscillation, but I can't really see the waveform to describe it, as I don't want to blow up the amp. All semiconductors are original. Thanks for your input, Tim Schwartz Bristol Electronics |
#9
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Sorry to come back... You didn't say whether this occurred when the outputs
weren't loaded. |
#10
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Tim Schwartz wrote in message
... On 1/4/2011 9:27 AM, N_Cook wrote: Tim wrote in message ... Hello and Happy New Year all, I've got a Luxman R117 receiver here that breaks into a wild oscillation when the amp is pushed. I believe that it occurs when the amp switches from the low B+ rails to the high B+ rails. Turning up the treble control seems to make it worse, but that might be a red herring. I've changed all of the electrolytic capacitors in the tone circuit, I've tested and substituted the 4 main filter caps. I've check the suppression network on the output.I this this is some sort of decoupling problem, but I've sent way too much time on this receiver. A friend who worked on these when they were under warranty has looked it over as well, and we're both stumped. Anyone in the group seen anything like this on a Luxman R117? Many thanks, Tim Schwartz Bristol Electronics Audio or ultrasonic osc? What happens with reduced rails via variac? Hello Nigel, It's an ultrasonic oscillation, and a lower line voltage does not help. Thanks for your time, Tim Bristol Electronics I would try some extra/changed C over preamp low voltage supplies or try some chokes in the prea rails |
#11
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I would try some extra/changed C over preamp low-
voltage supplies or try some chokes in the pre rails If these fix the problem, then the problem must be something fundamentally wrong with the receiver's design. I suspect that isn't it. |
#12
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William Sommerwerck wrote:
I would try some extra/changed C over preamp low- voltage supplies or try some chokes in the pre rails If these fix the problem, then the problem must be something fundamentally wrong with the receiver's design. I suspect that isn't it. At one time it was very common to use 1uF tantalum capacitors to bypass various devices because they would go into oscilation or produce high frequency hash without them. In the 1970's they were "required" for both input and output sides of three terminal voltage regulators. Over the years most of them have failed, some with a loud bang, some with no noticable effect. It's quite possible there are a few bypass caps that worked perfectly fine when the receiver was built that no longer do anything at all. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson N3OWJ/4X1GM Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to misquote it. |
#13
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I would try some extra/changed C over preamp low-
voltage supplies or try some chokes in the pre rails If these fix the problem, then the problem must be something fundamentally wrong with the receiver's design. I suspect that isn't it. At one time it was very common to use 1uF tantalum capacitors to bypass various devices because they would go into oscilation or produce high frequency hash without them. In the 1970's they were "required" for both input and output sides of three terminal voltage regulators. Over the years most of them have failed, some with a loud bang, some with no noticable effect. It's quite possible there are a few bypass caps that worked perfectly fine when the receiver was built that no longer do anything at all. No argument! But that wasn't what the poster said. (See above.) |
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