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What are you going to power it with? It has basically no filtration. Sure the Power cap is very low ESR, but unlike big giants in AB world, there is no filtration, or RF rejection of any sort.
Just now really taking a look at this amp. The lit says it is a dual bridge amplifier. Is this implying that it can be bridged?
No, it is saying that it only runs as a bridged amp. The stereo module has 4 amplifiers, 2 for each channel, with the 2 amps for each channel running antiphase and bridged.
I'm all about linear . 3A is plenty. But you should clean up power with some form of noise control. Can you get Teddy regs in 3a?I just made a mock PSU with MSR860's and a Coilcraft CMC with 1uf X2 cap on transformer secondaries. My SMPS can't compete. In fact I intend to play around a bit with it, considering different voltage regulators and such.You can also make boxes with linear that act as a better shield.
I just completed the mods - Holy moley, night and day difference.
Perhaps with a preamp that has some gain this would work. But I'm not certain the amplifier has any current deficiencies. I've had it hooked up to speakers that otherwise usually have a 250w Bryston (AB, constant current), and with a really cheap power supply was very close. I haven't re-tested it with a linear, but I suspect it will hold it's own maybe evenly until ear blistering volumes. I'm not certain, but you may need 1uf caps (or two 2.2uf caps using my configuration) on each channel to retain frequency response, with this parallel layout.
I'm still under the impression it can be anyone's main amp. You have some beautiful tube amps we've seen in pictures that I'm sure will be preferred, however.
If you still have the diode in, you got to get rid of that, and the film bypass cap on it! You really haven't scraped the ice on the windshield if all you've done is remove the pot ; just removed the snow.
I actually prefer this things minimalist component layout, as it can out class more expensive amps that don't maintain the higher frequencies as well through the horde of components that some equipment happens to have (quality vs. watts and features, usually). But it comes at the cost of having to do all the work for noise rejection in the power area. Some would call it "crisis" design, but whatever.
My pictures show he little yellow cap because I thought it was an bypass to ground from a different point within the chip. You can do that easily on a 3875 and other chip amps, but on this one it's just bypass cap that causes ringing (you'll hear it not ringing when you pull it, no joke, and you can wiggle it off if you're feeling lazy). I edited to show the removal of that capacitor later. Sorry about that. Perhaps with the original junk capacitor it was helpful, but with a better one it's just a nuisance.