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I envy you even attempting the build. I'm not that talented wish I were.Carry on, you'll get it..............enjoy.
Yes, I hope so Next step is to clean up the rats nest wiring job and reapply the clear coat finish re: i marred it up before it cured while disassembling and reassembling the unit like 5 times yesterday I had a couple of early problems--first I mis-wired the rectifier tube which caused it to arc when i fired the unit up Sorted that out....then checked for bias voltage and discovered I was shorting two low-voltage wires on the driver board to chassis (pushed them in too deep from the top-- )I then had another small issue which caused the rectifier tube to arc a second time . Anyhow got all of this sorted out about 6PM last night. Played music for two hours, went to dinner, left the unit on and upon returning around 8PM found the unit had blown the fuse. . Sooooo this morning rechecked all of the voltages, installed a fresh rectifier tube thinking the first may have gone south after all of the punishment I meted out during the diagnostic / initial start-up runs, installed a new fuse, re-biased the tubes......So far so good. Been humming along at moderate volume for the last 90 minutes without issue.If another fuse pops with the new rectifier tube, Bob suggested I recheck solder joints while I'm cleaning up the wiring--he thinks it is possible heat expansion can cause a poor solder connection to weaken to the point of failure...Quite an adventure.
Nice photos I admire people who can make a tube amp with their own hands.
Wow!! Sounds like you ran across some challenges! My guess is something perhaps got hurt when you ran into your original issues, causing your fuse to blow later? Well that's just a guess. I am certain you'll sort this out with additional troubleshooting time. Both of my M-125 came up error fee, but I did take my time and even created a wiring key while going through it. With that many wires, it's a MUST to triple verify your connection.
Well I'm cautiously optimistic it was the first rectifier tube that I punished re: the unit has been running continuously for close to 6 hours today without issue. I've been checking the bias every couple of hours as well and it seems very stable at .5 volts all around.I've always subscribed to the belief that things don't happen randomly in electronics (or software for that matter)--all symptoms should repeat if all other parameters are equal. So if there was a soldering joint problem and heat expansion caused it to fail, it would have repeated by now. Of course it could have been a voltage spike since we had storms here in Richmond VA last night, but I'm running the unit on a pretty heavy duty spike protector and these are 5 amp slow blow fuses, so I have to assume it was a sustained current draw that caused it to pop.That leaves the only component that clearly had an issue, the first rectifier tube that I arc'd twice!Of course I could be wrong
Your spike protector may have contributed to the fuse blowing. If my memory serves me correctly, Bob doesn't recommend any type of spike protectors or Filters eithnthese Amps. There are some threads directly related to he use of filters and surge protector use with his Amps. If it blows again, you might want to try running it Direct and without a surge protector.
Interesting, not sure how that could be; i searched for relavent threads but couldn't find anything. If you happen to have a reference please pass it along.BTW: any thoughts on how long tubes should 'burn in' on average before being considered stable? Also tips on biasing are very welcome (i've been obsessively checking the bias like every hour and only fluctuating about .01 over the six hours it's been on).Thanks
Of course it could have been a voltage spike since we had storms here in Richmond VA last night, but I'm running the unit on a pretty heavy duty spike protector and these are 5 amp slow blow fuses, so I have to assume it was a sustained current draw that caused it to pop.
Here is a link where Bob comments on this subject http://dynacotubeaudio.forumotion.com/t2945-st-120-problems
It does require some skill and you have to be good with your hands. However, with some practice I think it's totally achievable by those that feel slightly threatened by it. There are enough YouTube videos explaining soldering and point to point connections. Practice makes perfect!!
Thanks. He wrote me offline to explain. His concern is with cheap surge protectors that deform the AC wave form. I'm using a quality heavy duty unit from ISOBAR -- shouldn't be an issue.
Thanks for the encouragement, Iam not bad at soldering what I do not know is read schmatics and make the initial adjustments.
Then you wouldn't have any issues. Bob provides detailed written instructions and no schematic. It's written step by step informing you what connections to make next. I made a wiring list myself via an excel spreadsheet when I was building the M-125's, which I found was very helpful in keeping track of what connections I have completed.