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Quad 34 Problem
In article , h.tees
wrote: It is the volume control that needs replacing. It's a very common problem in most audio circuits of that age and the design of the control doesn't help. No need to bin the preamp, just find another volume control. Maplin will sell something suitable for around £2-3. Erm... IIRC the Quad 34 uses a special version of the Alps 40mm detent stepped pot/attenuator. I doubt you will find one from Maplin for 2-3 quid! ( If so, it is about time I sent them an order for a dozen. :-) ) Slainte, Jim -- Change 'noise' to 'jcgl' if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Quad 34 Problem
In article , Woody
wrote: "h.tees" wrote in message I don't think that may necessarily be the case. Quad were quite good with their circuit design, and if the volume pot interfaced to a high impedence load then it may not be the pot as such circuits were not prone to that type of noise. Unless the unit has been badly mistreated I also have doubts that the pot is to blame as they are quite high quality stepped attenuators. More likely a poor connection or dud cap elsewhere. I suspect the problem here is dried out and/or leaky electrolytic capacitors. Clicks whilst playing are typical of capacitors that are leaking and affecting d.c. bias conditions. I also suspect something like that. I would agree that crackles whilst playing are also typical of a volume pot that has gone noisy, but it should not do it at minimum volume where the pot wiper is effectively earthed. The loss of one channel that plays when the mono button is pressed says one pre-amp is not working. I had a Q33 which had plug-in circuit boards: it is just possible that this unit may be of the same construction and that the boards have become dislodged. It might be an idea to get the lid off and see if this is the case - if it has plug-in boards even remove them, clean the contacts if necessary and put them back. It might just cure everything. I'd also recommend that. I am trying to recall if early 34s had their ICs in holders. If so, something like that is a candidate. Slainte, Jim -- Change 'noise' to 'jcgl' if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Quad 34 Problem
In article , Rob
wrote: OK, thanks. Thing is, it looks to be quite a unique part - Alps, with a nice feel and little indented bumps as it turns. However, I'd be pretty certain that they're available somewhere. I don't think I'd do it myself, and there might be a 'good money after bad' type situation building up ... If you find a current UK supplier for small quantities of the Alps 40mm stepped attenuator series, please let me know! I have a few I obtained about 10 years ago, but have not been able to find a seller since! In this case, the simplest best would be to buy a replacement pot from Quad *if* it turns out to be the pot that is at fault - which I do doubt at present. Slainte, Jim -- Change 'noise' to 'jcgl' if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Quad 34 Problem
In article ,
h.tees wrote: It is the volume control that needs replacing. It's a very common problem in most audio circuits of that age and the design of the control doesn't help. No need to bin the preamp, just find another volume control. Maplin will sell something suitable for around £2-3. I would solder it in or get a friend who can - you will save a fortune. I'd be very surprised if Maplin sell a suitable replacement. -- * I like you. You remind me of when I was young and stupid Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Quad 34 Problem
In article ,
Jim Lesurf wrote: Unless the unit has been badly mistreated I also have doubts that the pot is to blame as they are quite high quality stepped attenuators. More likely a poor connection or dud cap elsewhere. Is it a stepped attenuator or just a normal pot with mechanical indents? I suspect the latter. -- *Just remember...if the world didn't suck, we'd all fall off* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Quad 34 Problem
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
wrote: In article , Jim Lesurf wrote: Unless the unit has been badly mistreated I also have doubts that the pot is to blame as they are quite high quality stepped attenuators. More likely a poor connection or dud cap elsewhere. Is it a stepped attenuator or just a normal pot with mechanical indents? I suspect the latter. IIRC the 40mm series of this type is a stepped attenuator. Metal landings with resistive elements between them, and the wiper moves across them. This was how Alps were able to sell versions laser trimmed to a given balance and attenuation spec. Hence why they were also very costly even in low-commercial-production quantities... and why they vanished from the UK as an single item purchase. Cost too much to make import/sale worth the effort when most people would buy something cheaper. The volume controls I chose for the ancient Armstrong 700 was a stepped attenuator from Alps of the kind I have in mind. With a laser trim to quite close tolerances. Cost a fortune at the time! But I felt it was worth it just to have the balance stay put as you wound the volume up and down over the range. Has also proved its worth since when I do measurements as I can accurately adjust and reset levels. They also did a 4-gang version at one time so you could control i/p and o/p level together! This turned up on a few amps from people like Pioneer, etc, IIRC, but was very expensive even without special trimming, so only on 'flagship' designs. Above said, for all I know they changed the design later on after learning how to get the same accuracy from a continuous track! The smaller Alps pots are a continuous track with a detent collar to mimic the behaviour, but not the precision of the results. Much cheaper to make, and so lower cost. Hence turned up on far more kit, and other mass production makers did similar, cheap, pretend attenuators using a collar. Alps probably would also do 40mm continuous with collar if wanted, so the 34 control *may* be that, but I think it is a discrete attenuator. If all that was wanted was a stepped action then the smaller pots with collar will give that at lower cost. The 40mm size costs cash, but gives space for the landings and elements, etc. However I've not cut open one of the controls from an old 34, so I may be being over-generous to PJW, Mike Albinson, etc. But I suspect not. :-) That said, if the faulty 34 that started this thread was sent to me, and I found that the control *was* to blame I could cut it open and report what I found. But I'm not going to buy one from Quad just for that! ;- Slainte, Jim -- Change 'noise' to 'jcgl' if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Quad 34 Problem
Rob wrote:
h.tees wrote: "Rob" wrote in message ... I've just plugged in a Quad 34 preamp that's been unused for a few years. When I turn the volume control up there's a series of loud high pitched clicks through the speakers, a bit like LP static discharge maybe. It was fine last time it was used. Does this sound like an expensive problem, or would I be better off punting it on ebay, and buying another (about £80 it seems)? Thanks, Rob It is the volume control that needs replacing. It's a very common problem in most audio circuits of that age and the design of the control doesn't help. No need to bin the preamp, just find another volume control. Maplin will sell something suitable for around £2-3. I would solder it in or get a friend who can - you will save a fortune. OK, thanks. Thing is, it looks to be quite a unique part - Alps, with a nice feel and little indented bumps as it turns. However, I'd be pretty certain that they're available somewhere. I don't think I'd do it myself, and there might be a 'good money after bad' type situation building up ... Rob There seems to be a lot of guessing going on. Why don't you just send it to Quad Service Dept. and get it fixed properly. It won't cost an arm & a leg - standard service charge is UKP48.00 and for that you get a FULL service. Defective parts over the value of UKP1.00, Freight & VAT are charged in addition. They guarantee labour & parts fitted for one full year. Furthermore they always use new packing material for the return journey if you haven't got the original packaging. So you end up with a properly functioning unit AND the correct packaging for that unit. Prices may have changed slightly since earlier this year, but you can always phone to confirm beforehand. |
Quad 34 Problem
"Jim Lesurf" Erm... IIRC the Quad 34 uses a special version of the Alps 40mm detent stepped pot/attenuator. I doubt you will find one from Maplin for 2-3 quid! ( If so, it is about time I sent them an order for a dozen. :-) ) ** The Quad 34 does not use a stepped attenuator. http://www.geocities.com/quad_esl63/...atic/pre34.jpg The Volume control ( RV1a and RV1b ) is wired in the inverting feedback loop around ICs 9 and 10. The gain characteristic of this arrangement is quite unlike that of a simple attenuator as it effectively converts a linear curve pot to log. So I strongly suspect RV1 is a dual gang, continuous track, *linear* pot of about 10 kohms. Gives a lost cost volume control with predictable log curve and good tracking. PW would not be able to resist it. ...... Phil |
Quad 34 Problem
Mike Coatham wrote:
Rob wrote: h.tees wrote: "Rob" wrote in message ... I've just plugged in a Quad 34 preamp that's been unused for a few years. When I turn the volume control up there's a series of loud high pitched clicks through the speakers, a bit like LP static discharge maybe. It was fine last time it was used. Does this sound like an expensive problem, or would I be better off punting it on ebay, and buying another (about ¬£80 it seems)? Thanks, Rob It is the volume control that needs replacing. It's a very common problem in most audio circuits of that age and the design of the control doesn't help. No need to bin the preamp, just find another volume control. Maplin will sell something suitable for around ¬£2-3. I would solder it in or get a friend who can - you will save a fortune. OK, thanks. Thing is, it looks to be quite a unique part - Alps, with a nice feel and little indented bumps as it turns. However, I'd be pretty certain that they're available somewhere. I don't think I'd do it myself, and there might be a 'good money after bad' type situation building up ... Rob There seems to be a lot of guessing going on. Why don't you just send it to Quad Service Dept. and get it fixed properly. It won't cost an arm & a leg - standard service charge is UKP48.00 and for that you get a FULL service. Defective parts over the value of UKP1.00, Freight & VAT are charged in addition. They guarantee labour & parts fitted for one full year. Furthermore they always use new packing material for the return journey if you haven't got the original packaging. So you end up with a properly functioning unit AND the correct packaging for that unit. Prices may have changed slightly since earlier this year, but you can always phone to confirm beforehand. Thanks Mike - I've just had a confirmation from Quad that that is, indeed, the deal. Seems amazing value - labour fixed at £48 plus VAT whatever needs doing, plus parts. Last time I took something in for repair to a local place it cost £50 just for them to look at it. I'll report back. Rob |
Quad 34 Problem
"Rob" Thanks Mike - I've just had a confirmation from Quad that that is, indeed, the deal. Seems amazing value - labour fixed at £48 plus VAT whatever needs doing, plus parts. Last time I took something in for repair to a local place it cost £50 just for them to look at it. ** Return to factory service is NOTHING like what your local repair tech has to do in order to fix something. For one, the factory generally has the needed PCBs, on hand, aplenty. For another, they will not bother attempting the time consuming, highly skilled job of diagnosing exactly which components are faulty - but rather will have low skilled " monkeys " swap PCBs about until it goes again. Or doesn't. As a result, you pay a low or fixed labour cost but a get very steep parts ( mostly unnecessary) bill instead. Eminently repairable gear is often declared to be uneconomic or impossible to fix by this primitive method. Once the stock of PCBs for old models dries up - they are ****ed and so are you. ...... Phil |
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