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First question. Gain. More precisely the adjustment thereof. When you are gunning for your 55mV gain do you just take the initial gain at switch on (ie.cold) or do you let it idle for a bit? After all the surgery, the gain started at 43 and I bumped it up to 55. Checked T2 and all was sweet then went back to T1 and we were up over 60 and climbing.....eventually got it down to 55 after ten minutes or so but nearly wound P1 back to where I started (or so I thought). This happened to both boards. Feed it some tunes (Massive Attack's 'Mezzanine') and managed to get the heatsinks well over room temperature. After resting for ten minutes, checked the reading across T1........30mV punched it back up to 45mV as suggested. And that's about it. Have done no more adjustment. Should I? Do I need to? Basically I don't understand the gain adjustment process so I have no idea whether all is good/bad/indifferent. Can someone explain in laymans terms what the go is just to set my mind at rest?
Second question/observation. I'm currently using a Yamaha integrated amp as a pre-amp. The AKSA is now hooked up as the amp (previously I'd bi-amped using the Yammy for the high range). If the AKSA is on and I kick the Yammy over I get a very sharp crack through the speaker - not loud but not real soft either - definitely not pleasant. Same goes when I switch off. Turning the CD on produces the same soft whump it always has. Turning the AKSA on last stops the crack but turning it off last doesn't (that said though there's still power in the AKSA even after a couple of minutes). What the heck is going on? This crack is something I've not heard before despite using the Yammy for quite some time as a pre-amp. It appears to crack in time with the Yammy switch relay but why would this be a drama now and not before. And this feature did not present itself at anytime during testing. Any ideas?
Hi Hugh,I am just curious to know how long does it take when the amp has been switched off to sound it's best ?RegardsRod
To set bias, switch on, let it idle for about an hour, THEN set the level. Ensure there are no strong draughts around the heatsinks; don't do it with the back door open and a gale roaring through the house!
OK. As for leaving the power on...........not a chance. specially during summer. We are 50km from the nearest sub-station, we have numerous properties between us and the sub-station - many with substantial electrical plant (irrigation pumps, coolrooms, machinery etc.), it gets ridiculously hot,.
..1)But at this point it would be cheaper to simply turn the amp off. ... I am not spending $1000 to fix something that I can fix just as easily by switching the amp off.2) I'm more inclined to spend the money if I can 'hear' the result but I suspect I won't. 3)I'm flat out hearing the break-in process of the N+ version. So fa ...
Yes I'm surprised Rod Elliot hasn't done anything in this regard. Perhaps because it's mains related, although some of his other kits are.
I wanted to ask you, how does the Altronics filter perform in relation to voltage spikes and ground loop?
The AKSA will have power for some time after switch off because of the considerable energy stored in the filter caps. This is normal. With the new power supply pcb you should have bleeder resistors (8K2) for each of the four rails. This will take about ten minutes to bleed off all voltage from these caps at switch off. Again, normal. The bleeders run warmish, of course.
... The negative power supply rail DOES hold up for quite some time ...