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Yet another thump problem. ;-)
In article , Trevor Wilson
wrote: On 31/05/2016 9:13 PM, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Phil Allison wrote: ** The simple solution is to add a DPDT relay to mute both inputs of the 405 whenever there is no AC power. Ideally, a miniature sealed type with gold contacts powered by rectified AC from the secondary of the transformer - plus a suitable series resistor. You can use the contacts to either ground the two signals or open circuit them. Snag is this squawk happens immediately at switch off. So the relay would have to operate extremely quickly. **Phil's idea is a good one. I used exactly that solution a short time back with a Sony integrated amp. The preamp section was going unstable at switch-off. The job was rapidly becoming unviable, so, after consultation with the client, he agreed that a fast operating relay would be acceptable. I used it to short the output of the preamp to earth at switch-off. Perfect solution. Not ideal, but it does work well. IIRC The Quad 34 has a circuit that clamps the output to ground as soon as the rails start to fall when you switch it off. 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 |
Yet another thump problem. ;-)
In article ,
Jim Lesurf wrote: I was more hoping someone could come up with why some of these crossovers squawk, but some not. I guess that we can't say much more than the obvious. i.e. that something is different between examples of amps and crossovers/speakers! Not exactly news for you. :-/ I've never seen an AM8/16 so have no idea what changes the BBC people may have made. I can't tell if the 'quawk' is due to a protection circuit rattling on and off, bursts of RF instability, or what. Might be fixable by a bigger output inductor or a cap in just the right place. But where?... Thought I'd made it fairly clear. If you remove the power to the crossover PCB while leaving the amp powered up, you get the squawk. Leave the power off that PCB, and the Quad part powers up and off normally. Ideally, you'd be best asking in some place were ancient BBC engineers are listening. But again, I'm not sure where to suggest! Finding one who knows the design intimately is the problem. As an aside, noticed the Keith Snooks site seems to have disappeared too. Everyone is getting old. -- *All those who believe in psychokinesis, raise my hand * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Yet another thump problem. ;-)
In article ,
Trevor Wilson wrote: Snag is this squawk happens immediately at switch off. So the relay would have to operate extremely quickly. **Phil's idea is a good one. I used exactly that solution a short time back with a Sony integrated amp. The preamp section was going unstable at switch-off. The job was rapidly becoming unviable, so, after consultation with the client, he agreed that a fast operating relay would be acceptable. I used it to short the output of the preamp to earth at switch-off. Perfect solution. Not ideal, but it does work well. But not really an answer to my question, thanks. It's an fairly obvious 'cure' although might well not be perfect in practice. -- *ONE NICE THING ABOUT EGOTISTS: THEY DON'T TALK ABOUT OTHER PEOPLE. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Yet another thump problem. ;-)
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
wrote: I've never seen an AM8/16 so have no idea what changes the BBC people may have made. I can't tell if the 'quawk' is due to a protection circuit rattling on and off, bursts of RF instability, or what. Might be fixable by a bigger output inductor or a cap in just the right place. But where?... Thought I'd made it fairly clear. If you remove the power to the crossover PCB while leaving the amp powered up, you get the squawk. Leave the power off that PCB, and the Quad part powers up and off normally. OK. Then maybe a circuit on the *input* of the 405 that duplicates what it sees from the output mute on the 34 might help? IIRC this just clamps the signal line to ground using a bipolar. 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 |
Yet another thump problem. ;-)
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
scribeth thus In article , Trevor Wilson wrote: Snag is this squawk happens immediately at switch off. So the relay would have to operate extremely quickly. **Phil's idea is a good one. I used exactly that solution a short time back with a Sony integrated amp. The preamp section was going unstable at switch-off. The job was rapidly becoming unviable, so, after consultation with the client, he agreed that a fast operating relay would be acceptable. I used it to short the output of the preamp to earth at switch-off. Perfect solution. Not ideal, but it does work well. But not really an answer to my question, thanks. It's an fairly obvious 'cure' although might well not be perfect in practice. Seems that this is in the BBC designed bit of the amp?. Have you got the circuit for that particular variant unit Dave;?.. Phil's idea is a good one but in this instance there is another fault thats causing a problem that shouldn't be there. Makes me wonder if thats having an effect on the signal path? Got a sack of mini relays made by Pickering used by Neve and Audix if you want a few, only problem is there're 24 volt ones.... -- Tony Sayer |
Yet another thump problem. ;-)
Ideally, you'd be best asking in some place were ancient BBC engineers are listening. But again, I'm not sure where to suggest! Finding one who knows the design intimately is the problem. As an aside, noticed the Keith Snooks site seems to have disappeared too. Everyone is getting old. His phone number is on here.. As to ageing your bloody right the(... http://www.dc-daylight.ltd.uk/ -- Tony Sayer |
Yet another thump problem. ;-)
In article ,
tony sayer wrote: But not really an answer to my question, thanks. It's an fairly obvious 'cure' although might well not be perfect in practice. Seems that this is in the BBC designed bit of the amp?. Yes. Have you got the circuit for that particular variant unit Dave;?.. I think so. I have three versions of the schematic but this amp is a fairly late one and appears to have the latest of the ones I've seen. That's not to say there isn't an even later version. If you'd like it, I'll post a link to it - but you've probably got it anyway. Phil's idea is a good one but in this instance there is another fault thats causing a problem that shouldn't be there. Quite. Makes me wonder if thats having an effect on the signal path? Got a sack of mini relays made by Pickering used by Neve and Audix if you want a few, only problem is there're 24 volt ones.... Got loads of suitable relays here too. Not a lover of relays in a signal path, though. We had an inline monitoring 48/4/2 Neve at Thames with thousands of the bloody things always giving problems. ;-) -- *Caution: I drive like you do. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Yet another thump problem. ;-)
On 2/06/2016 9:42 AM, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , tony sayer wrote: But not really an answer to my question, thanks. It's an fairly obvious 'cure' although might well not be perfect in practice. Seems that this is in the BBC designed bit of the amp?. Yes. Have you got the circuit for that particular variant unit Dave;?.. I think so. I have three versions of the schematic but this amp is a fairly late one and appears to have the latest of the ones I've seen. That's not to say there isn't an even later version. If you'd like it, I'll post a link to it - but you've probably got it anyway. Phil's idea is a good one but in this instance there is another fault thats causing a problem that shouldn't be there. Quite. Makes me wonder if thats having an effect on the signal path? Got a sack of mini relays made by Pickering used by Neve and Audix if you want a few, only problem is there're 24 volt ones.... Got loads of suitable relays here too. Not a lover of relays in a signal path, though. We had an inline monitoring 48/4/2 Neve at Thames with thousands of the bloody things always giving problems. ;-) **I'll bet they weren't decent, hermetically sealed, gold contact types, nor were they used to short the signal to earth. If such relays are used in that type of application, they almost never exhibit problems. Whenever I see a product with those clear topped, non-sealed DIL relays, I know exactly what needs to be done. When the relay is replaced with a proper one, I never see the job back. There are relays and there are decent quality relays. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
Yet another thump problem. ;-)
Trevor Wilson wrote:
Got a sack of mini relays made by Pickering used by Neve and Audix if you want a few, only problem is there're 24 volt ones.... Got loads of suitable relays here too. Not a lover of relays in a signal path, though. We had an inline monitoring 48/4/2 Neve at Thames with thousands of the bloody things always giving problems. ;-) **I'll bet they weren't decent, hermetically sealed, gold contact types, nor were they used to short the signal to earth. If such relays are used in that type of application, they almost never exhibit problems. ** Pickering (of the UK) relays are ALL reed types - so have glass encapsulated contacts. They feature Mu-metal shielding and are rated for millions of operations - certainly not a cheap component. http://www.pickeringrelay.com/ Whenever I see a product with those clear topped, non-sealed DIL relays, I know exactly what needs to be done. When the relay is replaced with a proper one, I never see the job back. There are relays and there are decent quality relays. ** The non sealed types I have come across develop bad contacts ( high resistance) and cleaning them is PITA. ..... Phil |
Yet another thump problem. ;-)
On Thu, 2 Jun 2016 04:29:14 -0700 (PDT), Phil Allison
wrote: Trevor Wilson wrote: Got a sack of mini relays made by Pickering used by Neve and Audix if you want a few, only problem is there're 24 volt ones.... Got loads of suitable relays here too. Not a lover of relays in a signal path, though. We had an inline monitoring 48/4/2 Neve at Thames with thousands of the bloody things always giving problems. ;-) **I'll bet they weren't decent, hermetically sealed, gold contact types, nor were they used to short the signal to earth. If such relays are used in that type of application, they almost never exhibit problems. ** Pickering (of the UK) relays are ALL reed types - so have glass encapsulated contacts. They feature Mu-metal shielding and are rated for millions of operations - certainly not a cheap component. http://www.pickeringrelay.com/ Whenever I see a product with those clear topped, non-sealed DIL relays, I know exactly what needs to be done. When the relay is replaced with a proper one, I never see the job back. There are relays and there are decent quality relays. ** The non sealed types I have come across develop bad contacts ( high resistance) and cleaning them is PITA. .... Phil Mosfets are an excellent alternative to relays these days. On resistance of a few milliohms in cheap packages. d --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
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