
JTC111
Active member
No mate, the only person to ever go on my ignore list made the rest of us look like saints
I really hope he's talking about me.
No mate, the only person to ever go on my ignore list made the rest of us look like saints
After the experts suss out the issues, we'll all have to fix them ourselves. That will involve me having to essentially learn how to perform complicated repairs on audio equipment. I will have to purchase the equipment to make those repairs. W paid for these pres almost a year ago. I have spent countless hours following these threads, keeping up on the progress.
All said and done, this will have been ANYTHING but free.
I really hope he's talking about me.
Re: tube PSUs, these are vastly simpler circuits than the preamps, so there is less concern there in general, and also the DOA/defect rate on the mics is much lower. My concern is not necessarily that a working supply is dangerously defective, but that there are reports of DOA tube mics that are potentially not being correctly diagnosed. Given that some pres had half-attached power connectors (which can be very hazardous), I would open and examine the PSU on these mics, and test output voltages of the pins, before I started messing around with swapping tubes.
can't see the picture [and really want to...]Here's the power supply hum.
Oh, and for your amusement, I decided it was time to own an oscilloscope. $1900 from Tektronix. Debated the models for a while before I picked that one. I figure it ought to last me the rest of my life.
I looked at a handheld unit once that was like $140, and I decided I couldn't afford itWavelab can record up to 384kHz, I should look at getting a 12 bit A/D that can do that rate. I really don't need to see frequencies above 40kHz anyway, for what I do . . .
Cool. You want to sell some then?? Cash in hand here. Let me know. I'll take them "as is" so you don't have to do any solder work! PM me.
After reading the last 5 pages - I'll take you up on that. I've got two 81's that haven't shipped from Chances yet. Check your PM's.
Thanks. I guess I need to open it up and take a look.Just jumper the diode attached to the heater regulator.
I have a 310 and a 900. The PSU's are the same chassis.when Marik modded my 6802T, he made some changes to the PSU - looked well deliberated, but not extensive in terms of parts or labor.
I didn't get a 1200, but if that's the mic we're talking about, I reckon the folks TnC is working with for mod kits will address any power issues.
ouch! -- the sting of ignorance - it hurts! I know you're planning to look more into this over the weekend, but if I could hazard a question: So far, I've only been able to locate "fast, soft recovery" diodes at that 600V rating. I see "fast recovery" diodes ("fast recovery rectifier" diodes, that is) at lower ratings. How important is the softness?I just replaced the four diodes for that 24V output stage with fast, soft recovery diodes (NTE 569) and the 24V rail hum is gone
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I do NOT recommend the NTE 569 for DIY repairs. The part is a 600V part, which means the leads are a LOT bigger in diameter than the stock diodes.
ouch! -- the sting of ignorance - it hurts! I know you're planning to look more into this over the weekend, but if I could hazard a question: So far, I've only been able to locate "fast, soft recovery" diodes at that 600V rating. I see "fast recovery" diodes ("fast recovery rectifier" diodes, that is) at lower ratings. How important is the softness?
OK - that makes sense - when a diode blocks current going the wrong way, it has to "recover" before normal operation resumes (major oversimplification alert goes here, I bet), and a "fast recovery" means it does so quickly and a "soft recovery" means it does so quietly (because normally, it might produce a lot of electrical noise) -- both are important here. I guess.I'm not certain, but I get the impression that the softness is key to avoiding the high energy spikes that aren't getting filtered out sufficiently by the caps.
I don't think switching to "soft recovery" will make any difference (though I admit to complete ignorance of soft recovery diodes - I believe they may be used in switching power supplies to reduce EMI.) If you're finding 20+ mv of ripple in the supply (if I'm reading it right), I'd think it's due to failure of the regulator, not the diodes or filter caps.
Would it make sense to switch out the regulators (eg, LM7812,LM7912 -> LM317,LM337)? Big circuit change?I don't think switching to "soft recovery" will make any difference (though I admit to complete ignorance of soft recovery diodes - I believe they may be used in switching power supplies to reduce EMI.) If you're finding 20+ mv of ripple in the supply (if I'm reading it right), I'd think it's due to failure of the regulator, not the diodes or filter caps.