General Discussion General discussion about all things car audio, from pioneer, orion, alpine and eclipse.

Amplifier repair

Old Mar 1, 2004 | 04:30 PM
  #13  
pinhead's Avatar
1000 Watt CAFz'r
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,770
Post

if you have voltage at the output terminals there are blown outputs there
you should always check transistors and diodes that drive the outputs as the they can be damaged due to the outputs blowing
Old Mar 1, 2004 | 06:03 PM
  #15  
pinhead's Avatar
1000 Watt CAFz'r
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,770
Post

if you have removed all the transistors from the channel you should have no sound from that channel
that would indicate you still have transistors on that channel
p.s. if you have no input signal there should be no voltage at the speaker terminals
and voltage there indicates you still have damaged parts at that channel
Old Mar 2, 2004 | 02:24 AM
  #17  
mister steve's Avatar
50 Watt CAFz'r
 
Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 295
Post

stop measuring out put in DC
sound is out put in AC, two totaly different forms of electricity
Old Mar 2, 2004 | 04:50 PM
  #19  
pinhead's Avatar
1000 Watt CAFz'r
 
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 1,770
Post

the transistors have dc as a power supply
when a input signal is applied to the transistor the transistor switches the dc into the same waveform the the input signal is
except its a larger output

when your output transistors fry then usually the dc that is the power supply for your outputs gets sent directly to your speaker outputs
because usually when they fry the transistor shorts out
Old Mar 2, 2004 | 05:16 PM
  #20  
mister steve's Avatar
50 Watt CAFz'r
 
Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 295
Post

so in other words at your speaker terminals you should not be reading 44v dc but a nice number in ac, your meter will read dc from an ac sorce but will get all goofy about it.

like you said, it wont amplify at the moment, you still have blown stuff, best way to cheak is to look for burnt stuff, grab your meter and measure continuity acrosse everything in the path, a skimatic of the amp helps at this point

that and your amp is ment to drive something, it dosent work to well if you just plug a meter into speaker outs and turn it on.

connect a speaker and use an amp meter, use ohms law to figure voltage in this case.

also you said you have s scope?
plug it in and play a test tone, see what the wave looks like.


and i aplogise if i sound preachy

[ March 02, 2004, 06:32 PM: Message edited by: mister steve ]

Thread Tools
Search this Thread

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 02:02 PM.