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Power amp DC offset
Hi experts,
How much DC offset would you consider acceptable in a power amp? What can you do on a rainy Sunday afternoon? I was poking around inside an old Rotel RA-970BX amp. It works OK except that the DC offset is about 100mv and 50mv on the two channels, which seems rather high to me. There is no adjustment, except for bias current, so any tweaking would probably have to be adjusting the current in one of the long-tailed pairs by swapping resistors. -- Eiron. |
Power amp DC offset
"Eiron" wrote in message ... Hi experts, How much DC offset would you consider acceptable in a power amp? What can you do on a rainy Sunday afternoon? I was poking around inside an old Rotel RA-970BX amp. It works OK except that the DC offset is about 100mv and 50mv on the two channels, which seems rather high to me. There is no adjustment, except for bias current, so any tweaking would probably have to be adjusting the current in one of the long-tailed pairs by swapping resistors. -- Have you tried adjusting the bias to see if you makes any difference? If you Google 'schematic RA970BX' you will get copious information including the service manual which includes how to set the bias. I suspect it will correct it. You should ideally be aiming for 10mV or less offset. -- Woody harrogate3 at ntlworld dot com |
Power amp DC offset
Eiron wrote:
How much DC offset would you consider acceptable in a power amp? ** An offset of +/- 100mV is Ok for regular 8 ohm speakers - but not for an ESL57 of the like which has a resistance of 0.3ohms. What can you do on a rainy Sunday afternoon? I was poking around inside an old Rotel RA-970BX amp. It works OK except that the DC offset is about 100mv and 50mv on the two channels, which seems rather high to me. There is no adjustment, except for bias current, so any tweaking would probably have to be adjusting the current in one of the long-tailed pairs by swapping resistors. ** That amp is a dog's breakfast. It uses complementary differential pairs at the input so ought to be almost input current and hence DC offset free - if they merely matched the Hfes and got the resistor values right. The input has 47kohms to ground while the overall feedback resistor is 12kohms. Good luck fixing it. .... Phil -- Eiron. |
Power amp DC offset
On Sun, 22 Feb 2015 19:35:14 -0000, "Woody"
wrote: "Eiron" wrote in message ... Hi experts, How much DC offset would you consider acceptable in a power amp? What can you do on a rainy Sunday afternoon? I was poking around inside an old Rotel RA-970BX amp. It works OK except that the DC offset is about 100mv and 50mv on the two channels, which seems rather high to me. There is no adjustment, except for bias current, so any tweaking would probably have to be adjusting the current in one of the long-tailed pairs by swapping resistors. -- Have you tried adjusting the bias to see if you makes any difference? If you Google 'schematic RA970BX' you will get copious information including the service manual which includes how to set the bias. I suspect it will correct it. You should ideally be aiming for 10mV or less offset. That's a pretty fair ideal to aim for. However, in the case of a 60W RMS per channel amplifier, even the 100mV offset isn't of any great concern. It represents a mere 80mW dissipation in the bass driver coil and an assymetric clipping level reduction by a tenth of a volt from the +/- 31 voltage swing available to support driving a 60W RMS sinewave into an 8 ohm speaker load. Since this is an old model, the less than ideal DC offset might simply be a symptom of elderly electrolytics suffering unusually high leakage current due to lack of use. The DC offset might well improve after a few hours use (or it just might get progressively worse). I suggest the OP runs it for an hour or two and recheck the DC offset for any signs of further drift over the first few hours and then recheck over the next few days and weeks if nothing untoward develops. -- J B Good |
Power amp DC offset
Woody wrote:
Have you tried adjusting the bias to see if you makes any difference? ** It won't. If you Google 'schematic RA970BX' you will get copious information including the service manual which includes how to set the bias. I suspect it will correct it. ** Not a chance - DC offset is an input problem, usually due to a combination of input transistor bias current and diff pair device matching. You should ideally be aiming for 10mV or less offset. ** Not necessary at all - rare exceptions already noted. .... Phil |
Power amp DC offset
Probably OK on most speakers, as long as it does not alter as the devices
heat up, and hopefully there is some kind of protection against excessive currents at DC. I mention this as I had a Memorex brandreceiver, obtained from Tandy which sounded great, but also had the ofset you mention, and a few years back one channel died and put some large volts and amps through a speaker and welded the cone to the pole pieces. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Eiron" wrote in message ... Hi experts, How much DC offset would you consider acceptable in a power amp? What can you do on a rainy Sunday afternoon? I was poking around inside an old Rotel RA-970BX amp. It works OK except that the DC offset is about 100mv and 50mv on the two channels, which seems rather high to me. There is no adjustment, except for bias current, so any tweaking would probably have to be adjusting the current in one of the long-tailed pairs by swapping resistors. -- Eiron. |
Power amp DC offset
In article , Eiron
wrote: Hi experts, How much DC offset would you consider acceptable in a power amp? What can you do on a rainy Sunday afternoon? I was poking around inside an old Rotel RA-970BX amp. It works OK except that the DC offset is about 100mv and 50mv on the two channels, which seems rather high to me. There is no adjustment, except for bias current, so any tweaking would probably have to be adjusting the current in one of the long-tailed pairs by swapping resistors. FWIW I'd tend to go along with aiming at around 10 - 20mV or less. And if its a long-tail-pair (ltp) started design you'd probably need to examine that end if you want to improve it. If it starts with an ltp then does it use two devices in one pack? If not, then you may be able to tweak by selecting a pair. If it is a packed pair you could find a better matched example. I don't know the design, but if the ltp is bipolars, consider the resistances though which each device gets its bias current. If they don't present similar resistancesfor the bias paths then that may be offsetting the result. That kind of problem made me prefer matched pairs of fets in a single pack for this kind of job. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page 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 |
Power amp DC offset
On 23/02/2015 10:09, Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article , Eiron wrote: Hi experts, How much DC offset would you consider acceptable in a power amp? What can you do on a rainy Sunday afternoon? I was poking around inside an old Rotel RA-970BX amp. It works OK except that the DC offset is about 100mv and 50mv on the two channels, which seems rather high to me. There is no adjustment, except for bias current, so any tweaking would probably have to be adjusting the current in one of the long-tailed pairs by swapping resistors. FWIW I'd tend to go along with aiming at around 10 - 20mV or less. And if its a long-tail-pair (ltp) started design you'd probably need to examine that end if you want to improve it. If it starts with an ltp then does it use two devices in one pack? If not, then you may be able to tweak by selecting a pair. If it is a packed pair you could find a better matched example. I don't know the design, but if the ltp is bipolars, consider the resistances though which each device gets its bias current. If they don't present similar resistancesfor the bias paths then that may be offsetting the result. That kind of problem made me prefer matched pairs of fets in a single pack for this kind of job. Two complementary long-tailed pairs feeding the + and - sides of the output stage. And the transistors are bonded together after installation presumably to equalize the temperature. It's the same basic design as all Rotel amps from the 90s. I guess the components are matched before installation but as there is no offset adjustment it either passes or fails on testing. I wonder what the factory limit is? An interesting point is that the feedback is taken from the speaker side of the fuse so if you remove the fuse there is no feedback and the output voltage drops to -38v. -- Eiron. |
Power amp DC offset
Jim Lesurf wrote:
I don't know the design, but if the ltp is bipolars, consider the resistances though which each device gets its bias current. **There are four BJTs, 2xNPN and 2xPNP in complimentary differential mode. In theory, Hfe matching of all four results in no input bias current at all. In reality, 1uA or 10mV across 10kohm is easy to achieve and so eliminate the offset trim pot. But Rotel have not matched the resistor values nor matched the four device's Hfes. .... Phil |
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